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1.
The proteomes expressed at 4°C and 18°C by the psychrophilic Antarctic bacterium Pseudoalteromonas haloplanktis have been compared using two‐dimensional differential in‐gel electrophoresis, showing that translation, protein folding, membrane integrity and anti‐oxidant activities are upregulated at 4°C. This proteomic analysis revealed that the trigger factor is the main upregulated protein at low temperature. The trigger factor is the first molecular chaperone interacting with virtually all newly synthesized polypeptides on the ribosome and also possesses a peptidyl‐prolyl cis‐trans isomerase activity. This suggests that protein folding at low temperatures is a rate‐limiting step for bacterial growth in cold environments. It is proposed that the psychrophilic trigger factor rescues the chaperone function as both DnaK and GroEL (the major bacterial chaperones but also heat‐shock proteins) are downregulated at 4°C. The recombinant psychrophilic trigger factor is a monomer that displays unusually low conformational stability with a Tm value of 33°C, suggesting that the essential chaperone function requires considerable flexibility and dynamics to compensate for the reduction of molecular motions at freezing temperatures. Its chaperone activity is strongly temperature‐dependent and requires near‐zero temperature to stably bind a model‐unfolded polypeptide.  相似文献   

2.
The halotolerance of a cold adapted α-amylase from the psychrophilic bacterium Pseudoalteromonas haloplanktis (AHA) was investigated. AHA exhibited hydrolytic activity over a broad range of NaCl concentrations (0.01–4.5 M). AHA showed 28% increased activity in 0.5–2.0 M NaCl compared to that in 0.01 M NaCl. In contrast, the corresponding mesophilic (Bacillus amyloliquefaciens) and thermostable (B. licheniformis) α-amylases showed a 39 and 46% decrease in activity respectively. Even at 4.5 M NaCl, 80% of the initial activity was detected for AHA, whereas the mesophilic and thermostable enzymes were inactive. Besides an unaltered fluorescence emission and secondary structure, a 10°C positive shift in the temperature optimum, a stabilization factor of >5 for thermal inactivation and a ΔT m of 8.3°C for the secondary structure melting were estimated in 2.7 M NaCl. The higher activation energy, half-life time and T m indicated reduced conformational dynamics and increased rigidity in the presence of higher NaCl concentrations. A comparison with the sequences of other halophilic α-amylases revealed that AHA also contains higher proportion of small hydrophobic residues and acidic residues resulting in a higher negative surface potential. Thus, with some compromise in cold activity, psychrophilic adaptation has also manifested halotolerance to AHA that is comparable to the halophilic enzymes. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. This article is dedicated to Late Dr. P. V. Sundaram.  相似文献   

3.
Two hypersensitive and two resistant variants of elongation factor-G (EF-G) toward fusidic acid are studied in comparison with the wild type factor. All mutated proteins are active in a cell-free translation system and ribosome-dependent GTP hydrolysis. The EF-G variants with the Thr-84-->Ala or Asp-109-->Lys mutations bring about a strong resistance of EF-G to the antibiotic, whereas the EF-Gs with substitutions Gly-16-->Val or Glu-119-->Lys are the first examples of fusidic acid-hypersensitive factors. A correlation between fusidic acid resistance of EF-G mutants and their affinity to GTP are revealed in this study, although their interactions with GDP are not changed. Thus, fusidic acid-hypersensitive mutants have the high affinity to an uncleavable GTP analog, but the association of resistant mutants with GTP is decreased. The effects of either fusidic acid-sensitive or resistant mutations can be explained by the conformational changes in the EF-G molecule, which influence its GTP-binding center. The results presented in this paper indicate that fusidic acid-sensitive mutant factors have a conformation favorable for GTP binding and subsequent interaction with the ribosomes.  相似文献   

4.
Two elongation factors (EF) EF-Tu and EF-G participate in the elongation phase during protein biosynthesis on the ribosome. Their functional cycles depend on GTP binding and its hydrolysis. The EF-Tu complexed with GTP and aminoacyl-tRNA delivers tRNA to the ribosome, whereas EF-G stimulates translocation, a process in which tRNA and mRNA movements occur in the ribosome. In the present paper we report that: (a) intrinsic GTPase activity of EF-G is influenced by excision of its domain III; (b) the EF-G lacking domain III has a 10(3)-fold decreased GTPase activity on the ribosome, whereas its affinity for GTP is slightly decreased; and (c) the truncated EF-G does not stimulate translocation despite the physical presence of domain IV, which is also very important for translocation. By contrast, the interactions of the truncated factor with GDP and fusidic acid-dependent binding of EF-G.GDP complex to the ribosome are not influenced. These findings indicate an essential contribution of domain III to activation of GTP hydrolysis. These results also suggest conformational changes of the EF-G molecule in the course of its interaction with the ribosome that might be induced by GTP binding and hydrolysis.  相似文献   

5.
Thiostrepton, a macrocyclic thiopeptide antibiotic, inhibits prokaryotic translation by interfering with the function of elongation factor G (EF-G). Here, we have used 70S ribosome binding and GTP hydrolysis assays to study the effects of thiostrepton on EF-G and a newly described translation factor, elongation factor 4 (EF4). In the presence of thiostrepton, ribosome-dependent GTP hydrolysis is inhibited for both EF-G and EF4, with IC(50) values equivalent to the 70S ribosome concentration (0.15 μM). Further studies indicate the mode of thiostrepton inhibition is to abrogate the stable binding of EF-G and EF4 to the 70S ribosome. In support of this model, an EF-G truncation variant that does not possess domains IV and V was shown to possess ribosome-dependent GTP hydrolysis activity that was not affected by the presence of thiostrepton (>100 μM). Lastly, chemical footprinting was employed to examine the nature of ribosome interaction and tRNA movements associated with EF4. In the presence of non-hydrolyzable GTP, EF4 showed chemical protections similar to EF-G and stabilized a ratcheted state of the 70S ribosome. These data support the model that thiostrepton inhibits stable GTPase binding to 70S ribosomal complexes, and a model for the first step of EF4-catalyzed reverse-translocation is presented.  相似文献   

6.
The EF G-dependent binding of 3H-GMPPCP to ribosomes was studied. The binding was dependent on temperature. Methanol, but not fusidic acid, stimulated the binding at 0°C to the level of that at 37°C. Kinetic studies of the binding suggested that two EF G were involved in the binding, and that one of the two of EF G could be replaced with fusidic acid.  相似文献   

7.
In the absence of ribosomal particles, elongation factor G (EF-G) promotes very little GTP hydrolysis. After the addition of some aliphatic alcohols to EF-G, the rate of nucleotide cleavage was significantly increased and GTPase activity was easily detectable. The highest stimulation, nearly 16-fold, occurred with 2-propanol at a 20% (v/v) concentration. The reaction showed the characteristics of an enzymatic catalysis, but the rate was three orders of magnitude lower than that of the ribosome-dependent EF-G GTPase activity. Striking similarities between the two activities indicated that the catalysis stimulated by the alcohol was due to EF-G itself. We found that EF-G GTPase activity in the presence of 2-propanol displayed an absolute specificity for GTP as in the presence of ribosomes; the two activities copurified to a constant ratio and exhibited coincident chromatographic and electrophoretic patterns; the temperature for the half-inactivation of EF-G was 59.3 degrees C for both GTPase systems, as well as the kinetic constant for the thermal inactivation process which was found to be 0.05 min-1; and the Km for the GTP in the presence of 2-propanol (59 microM) was similar to that found in the presence of ribosomes. These results indicate that the EF-G molecule carries a catalytic site for GTP hydrolysis, which in the absence of ribosomal particles is activated by an appropriate alcohol/water surrounding medium.  相似文献   

8.
The endogenous components of the thioredoxin system in the Antarctic eubacterium Pseudoalteromonas haloplanktis have been purified and characterised. The temperature dependence of the activities sustained by thioredoxin (PhTrx) and thioredoxin reductase (PhTrxR) pointed to their adaptation in the cold growth environment. PhTrxR was purified as a flavoenzyme and its activity was significantly enhanced in the presence of molar concentration of monovalent cations. The energetics of the partial reactions leading to the whole electron transfer from NADPH to the target protein substrate in the reconstituted thioredoxin system was also investigated. While the initial electron transfer from NADPH to PhTrxR was energetically favoured, the final passage to the heterologous protein substrate enhanced the energetic barrier of the whole process. The energy of activation of the heat inactivation process essentially reflected the psychrophilic origin of PhTrxR. Vice versa, PhTrx possessed an exceptional heat resistance (half-life, 4.4 h at 95 °C), ranking this protein among the most thermostable enzymes reported so far in psychrophiles. PhTrxR was covalently modified by glutathione, mainly by its oxidised or nitrosylated forms. A mutagenic analysis realised on three non catalytic cysteines of the flavoenzyme allowed the identification of C303 as the target for the S-glutathionylation reaction.  相似文献   

9.
Titration of elongation factor G (EF-G) with the thiol reagents 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate) (DNTB), p-hydroxymercuribenzoate (HMB), and N-ethylmaleimide and analysis of cysteic acid after performic acid oxidation revealed a total of four sulfhydryl groups per EF-G molecule. One of these is exposed in the native state and could be used to distinguish between two different conformations of EF-G in our preparations according to its rate of reaction with DTNB and HMB. No evidence for disulfide bridges was obtained. Among the different nucleotides tested, GTP, GDP, and GMP were able to protect the native sulfhydryl group against reaction with DTNB in the absence of ribosomes. Their Kd values with the faster reacting EF-G were 3.4 x 10(-4) M, 0.3 X 10(-4)M, and 2.0 x 10(-4) M, respectively. Because of the specificity of protection by guanine nucleotides and the correspondence of the Kd values with Ki values for GDP and GMP in the ribosome-EF-G GTPase reaction, their binding site on EF-G should be closely related to the active center for ribosome-dependent GTP hydrolysis. Blockage of the native sulfhydryl group of EF-G with a variety of irreversible thiol reagents reduced its activity from one to two-thirds in ribosome-dependent complex formation, GTP hydrolysis, and poly(U)-directed poly(phenylalanine) synthesis. A test of the N-ethylmaleimide-treated EF-G showed both the Km and Vmax of the GTPase reaction to be affected. Thus, the native sulfhydryl group, although important, appears not to be located in the GTPase active center. Denaturation of EF-G with guanidine-HCl and random blockage of any of the three masked sulfhydryl groups caused inactivation, likely due to steric interference with proper chain folding upon renaturation. Treatment of ribosomes or ribosomal subunits with six different thiol reagents at a concentration of 0.27 mM had little or no effect on the ribosome-EF-G GTPase, except for the case with HMB which inactivated the 30 S subunit. An interaction of EF-G with the 30 S subunit in addition to that known to occur with the 50 S subunit is suggested by a rapid and preferential exchange of HMB from the native sulfhydryl group of EF-G to the 30 S subunit of 70 S ribosomes.  相似文献   

10.
An inhibitor of elongation factor G (EF-G) GTPase isolated from the ribosome wash of Escherichia coli was shown to stimulate the poly(A,U,G)- and initiation factor 2 (IF2)-dependent binding of N-formyl-[35S]Met-tRNAfMet to ribosomes. In the presence of saturating amounts of the EF-G GTPase inhibitor, neither addition of initiation factor 1 (IF1) nor addition of initiation factor 3 (IF3) caused a further stimulation of the formation of N-formyl-[35S]Met-tRNAfMET/poly(A,U,G)/ribosome complexes. Both IF1 and IF3 were shown to inhibit ribosome-dependent EF-G GTPase, especially when both initiation factors were added either in absence or in the presence of initiation factor 2 (IF2), poly(A,U,G) and N-formyl-Met-tRNAfMet. Therefore, we conclude that the EF-G GTPase inhibitor consisting of two polypeptide subunits with apparent molecular masses of 23,000 and 10,000 Da is a complex of initiation factors IF1 and IF3. The inhibition of EF-G GTPAse by IF3, but not the effects of IF1 in the presence or absence of IF3 could be reversed by increasing the Mg(2+)-concentration as already shown for the EF-G GTPase inhibitor. Therefore, IF1 as well as the EF-G GTPase inhibitor do not influence the ribosome-dependent EF-G GTPase by affecting the association of ribosomal subunits.  相似文献   

11.
Two inhibitors of ribosome-dependent GTP hydrolysis by elongation factor (EF)G were found in the ribosome wash of Escherichia coli strain B. One of these inhibitors was purified to homogeneity and characterized. The isolated inhibitor was found to consist of two polypeptide subunits with apparent molecular masses of 23 kDa and 10 kDa. Inhibition of EF-G GTPase could not be overcome by increasing amounts of the elongation factor or high concentrations of GTP, but was reversed by large amounts of ribosomes. The effect of the inhibitor was reduced by increasing concentrations of either 30S or 50S ribosomal subunits. EF-G-dependent GTPase of 50S ribosomal subunits was not affected by the inhibitor. These findings clearly show that the inhibitor interferes with the modulation of EF-G GTPase activity by the interactions between 30S and 50S ribosomal subunits. Under conditions, where 30S CsCl core particles are able to associate with 50S subunits and to stimulate EF-G GTPase, the effect of the inhibitor was considerably reduced when intact 30S ribosomal subunits were substituted by 30S CsCl core particles. This finding indicates that 30S CsCl split proteins are important for the action of the inhibitor and that the inhibitor does not affect the EF-G GTPase merely by interfering with the association of ribosomal subunits. Furthermore, poly(U)-dependent poly(phenylalanine) synthesis was considerably less sensitive to the inhibitor than EF-G GTPase. When ribosomes were preincubated with poly(U) and Phe-tRNA(Phe), poly(phenylalanine) synthesis was considerably less affected by the inhibitor, whereas EF-G GTPase was still sensitive.  相似文献   

12.
The genome of the Antarctic bacterium Pseudoalteromonas haloplanktis TAC125 was searched for the presence of genes encoding ester-hydrolysing enzymes. Amongst the others, the gene PSHAa0051 coding for a putative secreted esterase/lipase was selected. The psychrophilic gene was cloned, functionally over-expressed in P. haloplanktis TAC125, and the recombinant product (after named PhTAC125 Lip1) was purified. PhTAC125 Lip1 was found to be associated to the outer membrane and exhibited higher enzymatic activity towards synthetic substrates with long acyl chains. A structural model was constructed using the structure of carboxylesterase Est30 from Geobacillus stearothermophilus as template. The model covered the central part of the protein with the exceptions of PhTAC125 Lip1 N- and C-terminal regions, where the psychrophilic protein displays extra-domains. The constructed model showed a typical α/β-hydrolase fold, and confirmed the presence of a canonical catalytic triad consisting of Ser, Asp and His. The sequence analysis showed that PhTAC125 Lip1 is distantly related to other lipolytic enzymes, but closely related to other putative psychrophilic esterases/lipases. The aligned proteins share common features, such as: (1) a conserved new active-site pentapeptide motif (LGG(F/L/Y)STG); (2) the likely extra-cytoplasmic localization, (3) the absence of a typical calcium-binding pocket, and (4) the absence of a canonical lid. These observations strongly suggest that aligned proteins constitute a novel lipase family, typical of psychrophilic marine γ-proteobacteria, and PhTAC125 Lip1 could be considered the first characterised member of this family. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. D. de Pascale and A. M. Cusano equally contributed to the work.  相似文献   

13.
Selecting entomopathogenic fungal isolates for use as biocontrol agents requires an assessment of their growth and virulence characteristics as affected by environmental conditions. Here we demonstrate a wide temperature and moisture range for colony growth, effective conidial germination and virulence against Pissodes strobi Peck (white pine weevil) of several isolates of Lecanicillium Gams and Zare, an entomopathogenic fungus distributed worldwide and indigenous to forests on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. In order to examine the potential Lecanicillium as a biological control agent, the pathogenicity of isolates collected from different geographical locations on P. strobi cadavers was assessed, and colony growth at different temperatures was evaluated. Colony growth was evident between 5 and 30°C, with optimal growth occurring at 25°C. Various combinations of water activity (0.55, 0.76, 0.85 and 0.99 a w) and temperature (10, 15, 20, and 25°C) were also used to evaluate environmental impacts on conidial germination and cumulative mycosis of adult P. strobi. Certain Lecanicillium isolates displayed xerophilic (0.85 a w) or psychrophilic (10°C) growth optima. Ultimately, identifying the abiotic limits of this entomopathogenic fungus will be used to determine which isolates have potential for future in situ biocontrol trials.  相似文献   

14.
The Euglena gracilis mitochondrial protein biosynthetic elongation factor G (EF-Gmt) has been purified in four steps to greater than 50% homogeneity by use of a fusidic acid affinity procedure and conventional chromatographic techniques. The purification scheme results in 1100-fold purification with about 3% recovery of the total EF-G activity present in the postribosomal supernatant prepared from whole cell extracts. E. gracilis EF-Gmt has an approximate molecular weight of 76,000, comparable to that observed for procaryotic translocases. As is the case for other translocases which have been examined, pretreatment of E. gracilis EF-Gmt with N-ethylmaleimide results in a loss of polymerization activity, indicating a role for an essential cysteine residue in catalytic activity. GDP partially protects EF-Gmt from N-ethylmaleimide inactivation. E. gracilis EF-Gmt functions well on both Escherichia coli and E. gracilis chloroplast ribosomes, but has negligible activity on wheat germ cytoplasmic ribosomes. In this respect, it differs significantly from the mitochondrial translocase of yeast which has very little activity on chloroplast ribosomes. When assayed on E. coli ribosomes, E. gracilis EF-Gmt is sensitive to the steroid antibiotic, fusidic acid, at levels similar to that required for inactivation of E. coli EF-G. It is less sensitive than E. gracilis chloroplast EF-G, and is more sensitive than Bacillus subtilis EF-G. When assayed on E. gracilis chloroplast ribosomes, the same trends in sensitivities are observed, although the exact level of fusidic acid required for inactivation is slightly altered.  相似文献   

15.
Protein synthesis studies increasingly focus on delineating the nature of conformational changes occurring as the ribosome exerts its catalytic functions. Here, we use FRET to examine such changes during single-turnover EF-G-dependent GTPase on vacant ribosomes and to elucidate the mechanism by which fusidic acid (FA) inhibits multiple-turnover EF-G.GTPase. Our measurements focus on the distance between the G' region of EF-G and the N-terminal region of L11 (L11-NTD), located within the GTPase activation center of the ribosome. We demonstrate that single-turnover ribosome-dependent EF-G GTPase proceeds according to a kinetic scheme in which rapid G' to L11-NTD movement requires prior GTP hydrolysis and, via branching pathways, either precedes P(i) release (major pathway) or occurs simultaneously with it (minor pathway). Such movement retards P(i) release, with the result that P(i) release is essentially rate-determining in single-turnover GTPase. This is the most significant difference between the EF-G.GTPase activities of vacant and translocating ribosomes [Savelsbergh, A., Katunin, V. I., Mohr, D., Peske, F., Rodnina, M. V., and Wintermeyer, W. (2003) Mol. Cell 11, 1517-1523], which are otherwise quite similar. Both the G' to L11-NTD movement and P(i) release are strongly inhibited by thiostrepton but not by FA. Contrary to the standard view that FA permits only a single round of GTP hydrolysis [Bodley, J. W., Zieve, F. J., and Lin, L. (1970) J. Biol. Chem. 245, 5662-5667], we find that FA functions rather as a slow inhibitor of EF-G.GTPase, permitting a number of GTPase turnovers prior to complete inhibition while inducing a closer approach of EF-G to the GAC than is seen during normal turnover.  相似文献   

16.
1. The amino acid composition of wheat germ EF2 differs to some extent from that of elongation factors from mammals and bacteria. 2. The purified wheat germ EF2, similarly as the factors from other sources, is active in the: EF1-dependent polymerization of phenylalanine; ribosome-dependent GTP hydrolysis; binding of guanosine nucleotides; and ADP-ribosylation in the presence of diphtheria toxin. Fusidic acid at a concentration of 1 mM inhibits all these EF2-dependent reactions. 3. Diphtheria toxin in the presence of NAD+ inhibits polymerization of phenylalanine but does not effect GTP binding to EF2. 4. Binding of GDP to wheat germ EF2 is inhibited by ribosomes. During interaction with ribosomes, GTP in EF2-GTP complex is rapidly hydrolysed to GDP. Both GTP and 5'-guanylmethylenediphosphonate competitively inhibit formation of the ribosome-EF2-GDP complex due to the replacement of GDP from the complex. The latter is stabilized by fusidic acid.  相似文献   

17.
Random mutagenesis was used to create a library of chimeric dextranase (dex1) genes. A plate-screening protocol was developed with improved thermostability as a selection criterion. The mutant library was screened for active dextranase variants by observing clearing zones on dextran-blue agar plates at 50°C after exposure to 68°C for 2 h, a temperature regime at which wild-type activity was abolished. A number of potentially improved variants were identified by this strategy, five of which were further characterised. DNA sequencing revealed ten nucleotide substitutions, ranging from one to four per variant. Thermal inactivation studies showed reduced (2.9-fold) thermostability for one variant and similar thermostability for a second variant, but confirmed improved thermostability for three mutants with 2.3- (28.9 min) to 6.9-fold (86.6 min) increases in half-lives at 62°C compared to that of the wild-type enzyme (12.6 min). Using a 10-min assay, apparent temperature optima of the variants were similar to that of the wild type (T opt 60°C). However, one of these variants had increased enzyme activity. Therefore, the first-generation dextranase mutant pool obtained in this study has sufficient molecular diversity for further improvements in both thermostability and activity through recombination (gene shuffling).  相似文献   

18.
Mammalian mitochondria have their own dedicated protein synthesis system, which produces 13 essential subunits of the oxidative phosphorylation complexes. We have reconstituted an in vitro translation system from mammalian mitochondria, utilizing purified recombinant mitochondrial translation factors, 55S ribosomes from pig liver mitochondria, and a tRNA mixture from either Escherichia coli or yeast. The system is capable of translating leaderless mRNAs encoding model proteins (DHFR and nanoLuciferase) or some mtDNA-encoded proteins. We show that a leaderless mRNA, encoding nanoLuciferase, is faithfully initiated without the need for any auxiliary factors other than IF-2mt and IF-3mt. We found that the ribosome-dependent GTPase activities of both the translocase EF-G1mt and the recycling factor EF-G2mt are insensitive to fusidic acid (FA), the translation inhibitor that targets bacterial EF-G homologs, and consequently the system is resistant to FA. Moreover, we demonstrate that a polyproline sequence in the protein causes 55S mitochondrial ribosome stalling, yielding ribosome nascent chain complexes. Analyses of the effects of the Mg concentration on the polyproline-mediated ribosome stalling suggested the unique regulation of peptide elongation by the mitoribosome. This system will be useful for analyzing the mechanism of translation initiation, and the interactions between the nascent peptide chain and the mitochondrial ribosome.  相似文献   

19.
Two Escherichia coli mutants lacking ribosomal protein L1, previously shown to display 40 to 60% reduced capacity for in vitro protein synthesis (Subramanian, A. R., and Dabbs, E. R. (1980) Eur. J. Biochem. 112, 425-430), have been used to study partial reactions of protein biosynthesis. Both the binding of N-acetyl-Phe-tRNA to ribosomes and the 6 to 8-fold stimulation of the elongation factor G (EF-G)-dependent GTPase reaction by mRNA plus tRNA, assayed in the presence of wild type 30 S subunits, were low with L1-deficient 50 S subunits. Addition of pure protein L1 to the assay restored both reactions to 100% of the control. By contrast, the basic EF-G GTPase reaction in the absence of mRNA and tRNA was not at all affected (mRNA alone had no effect). None of the following partial reactions were more than moderately modified by the lack of protein L1: binding to ribosomes of EF-G.GDP plus fusidic acid; the translocation reaction catalyzed by EF-G plus GTP; poly(U)-dependent binding to ribosomes of Phe-tRNAPhe (whether dependent on elongation factor Tu plus GTP or not); and the EF-Tu-dependent GTPase activity. It is concluded that protein L1 is involved in the interaction between ribosomes and peptidyl-tRNA (or tRNA) in the peptidyl site and consequently in the ribosomal GTPase activity depending on the simultaneous action of tRNA and EF-G.  相似文献   

20.
The antibiotic sensitivity of the archaebacterial factors catalyzing the binding of aminoacyl-tRNA to ribosomes (elongation factor Tu [EF-Tu] for eubacteria and elongation factor 1 [EF1] for eucaryotes) and the translocation of peptidyl-tRNA (elongation factor G [EF-G] for eubacteria and elongation factor 2 [EF2] for eucaryotes) was investigated by using two EF-Tu and EF1 [EF-Tu(EF1)]-targeted drugs, kirromycin and pulvomycin, and the EF-G and EF2 [EF-G(EF2)]-targeted drug fusidic acid. The interaction of the inhibitors with the target factors was monitored by using polyphenylalanine-synthesizing cell-free systems. A survey of methanogenic, halophilic, and sulfur-dependent archaebacteria showed that elongation factors of organisms belonging to the methanogenic-halophilic and sulfur-dependent branches of the "third kingdom" exhibit different antibiotic sensitivity spectra. Namely, the methanobacterial-halobacterial EF-Tu(EF1)-equivalent protein was found to be sensitive to pulvomycin but insensitive to kirromycin, whereas the methanobacterial-halobacterial EF-G(EF2)-equivalent protein was found to be sensitive to fusidic acid. By contrast, sulfur-dependent thermophiles were unaffected by all three antibiotics, with two exceptions; Thermococcus celer, whose EF-Tu(EF1)-equivalent factor was blocked by pulvomycin, and Thermoproteus tenax, whose EF-G(EF2)-equivalent factor was sensitive to fusidic acid. On the whole, the results revealed a remarkable intralineage heterogeneity of elongation factors not encountered within each of the two reference (eubacterial and eucaryotic) kingdoms.  相似文献   

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