Abstract: | Tetrahymena thermophila is an ideal organism with which to study functional aspects of the rRNAs in vivo since the somatic rRNA genes of T. thermophila can be totally replaced by cloned copies introduced via microinjection. In this study, we made small insertions into seven sites within the small subunit rRNA gene and observed their phenotypic effects on transformed cells. Two mutated genes coding for rRNA (rDNAs), both of which bear insertions in highly conserved sequences, failed to transform and are therefore believed to produce nonfunctional rRNAs. Three other altered rDNAs produce functional rRNAs that can substitute for most or all of the cellular rRNA. Two of these bear insertions in highly variable regions, and, surprisingly, the other has an insertion in a region that is well conserved for both sequence and secondary structure among eucaryotes. In addition, two other insertions appear to destabilize rRNAs that contain them. Our findings make predictions concerning the positions of some of these sites within the tertiary structure of the small ribosomal subunit and thus serve as an in vivo test of the existing tertiary structure models for the small subunit rRNA. Our results are in good agreement with expectations based on sequence comparison and in vitro work. |