首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 406 毫秒
1.
Bacillus subtilis 30 S subunits inefficiently recognize initiation sites in mRNAs from Gram-negative bacteria, but they are able to efficiently recognize initiation sites in mRNA derived from Gram-positive bacteria. McLaughlin et al. (McLaughlin, J. R., Murray, C. L., and Rabinowitz, J. C. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 11283-11291) have suggested that B. subtilis ribosomes require a strong Shine-Dalgarno sequence for translation initiation. To test whether this criterion is sufficient to explain the translational specificity of B. subtilis ribosomes, T7 late mRNA, which contains strong Shine-Dalgarno sequences before many of the late genes (Dunn, J. J., and Studier, F. W. (1983) J. Mol. Biol. 166, 477-535), was translated in vitro with both Escherichia coli and B. subtilis ribosomes. The identification of several of the in vitro products upon gel electrophoresis indicated that B. subtilis ribosomes recognize correct translation initiation sites in late T7 mRNA, but they do not translate these products efficiently. Competition experiments demonstrated that late T7 mRNA does not inhibit B. subtilis ribosomal translation of B. subtilis derived mRNA (from the bacteriophage phi 29). It is concluded that strong Shine-Dalgarno sequences may be necessary in B. subtilis translation initiation sites; however, additional determinants of initiation which differ from those found in the translation initiation sites of E. coli mRNAs must exist.  相似文献   

2.
Ribosomes from Gram-negative bacteria such as Escherichia coli exhibit non-specific translation of bacterial mRNAs. That is, they are able to translate mRNAs from a variety of sources in a manner independent of the "strength" of the Shine-Dalgarno region, in contrast to ribosomes from many Gram-positive bacteria, such as Bacillus subtilis, which show specific translation in only being able to translate other Gram-positive mRNA, or mRNAs that have "strong" Shine-Dalgarno regions. There is an evolutionary correlation between the translational specificity and the absence of a protein analogous to E. coli ribosomal protein S1. The specificity observed with B. subtilis ribosomes is a function of their 30 S subunit which lacks S1; translation of Gram-negative mRNA can occur with heterologous ribosomes containing the 30 S subunit of E. coli ribosomes and the 50 S subunit of B. subtilis ribosomes. However, the addition of E. coli S1 alone to B. subtilis ribosome does not overcome their characteristic inability to translate mRNA from Gram-negative organisms. By contrast, the removal of S1 from E. coli ribosomes results in translational behavior similar to that shown by B. subtilis ribosomes in that the S1-depleted E. coli ribosomes can translate mRNA from Gram-positive sources in the absence of added S1, although addition of S1 stimulates further translation of such mRNAs by the E. coli ribosomes.  相似文献   

3.
4.
An RNA processing activity capable of cleaving Bacillus subtilis phage SP82 early mRNA has been purified to apparent homogeneity from crude extracts of uninfected B. subtilis. The enzyme, a functional monomer of Mr approximately 27,000, cleaves only at the 5' side of adenosine residues at processing sites and is competitively inhibited by double-stranded synthetic RNA polymers. Processed SP82 mRNAs were translated in an Escherichia coli cell-free system and no qualitative or quantitative effects of processing on the synthesis of polypeptides was observed. The processing enzyme does not cleave T7 mRNA, E. coli precursor rRNA, or double-stranded poly(AU). A recombinant plasmid containing portions of two B. subtilis rRNA gene sets was transcribed in vitro and the resulting RNA was cleaved in the spacer region between the 16 S and 23 S rRNA genes. The ability of the B. subtilis processing enzyme to cleave SP82 mRNA and B. subtilis precursor rRNA and the fact that the enzyme has high affinity for double-stranded RNA suggest that it is the functional analog of E. coli RNase III.  相似文献   

5.
6.
A method is described to determine simultaneously the effect of any changes in the ribosome-binding site (RBS) of mRNA on translational efficiency in Bacillus subtilis and Escherichia coli in vivo. The approach was used to analyse systematically the influence of spacing between the Shine-Dalgarno sequence and the initiation codon, the three different initiation codons, and RBS secondary structure on translational yields in the two organisms. Both B. subtilis and E. coli exhibited similar spacing optima of 7-9 nucleotides. However, B. subtilis translated messages with spacings shorter than optimal much less efficiently than E. coli. In both organisms, AUG was the preferred initiation codon by two- to threefold. In E. coli GUG was slightly better than UUG while in B. subtilis UUG was better than GUG. The degree of emphasis placed on initiation codon type, as measured by translational yield, was dependent on the strength of the Shine-Dalgarno interaction in both organisms. B. subtilis was also much less able to tolerate secondary structure in the RBS than E. coli. While significant differences were found between the two organisms in the effect of specific RBS elements on translation, other mRNA components in addition to those elements tested appear to be responsible, in part, for translational species specificity. The approach described provides a rapid and systematic means of elucidating such additional determinants.  相似文献   

7.
The gene coding for the subunits of aspartokinase II from Bacillus subtilis has been identified in a B. subtilis DNA library and cloned in a bacterial plasmid (Bondaryk, R. P., and Paulus, H. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 585-591). The introduction of a plasmid carrying the aspartokinase II gene into an auxotrophic Escherichia coli strain lacking all three aspartokinases restored its ability to grow in the absence of L-lysine, L-threonine, and L-methionine. The B. subtilis aspartokinase gene could thus be functionally expressed in E. coli and substitute for the E. coli aspartokinases. Measurement of aspartokinase levels in extracts of aspartokinaseless E. coli transformed with the B. subtilis aspartokinase II gene revealed an enzyme level comparable to that in a genetically derepressed B. subtilis strain. In spite of the high level of aspartokinase, the growth of the transformed E. coli strain was severely inhibited by the addition of L-lysine but could be restored by also adding L-homoserine. This apparently paradoxical sensitivity to lysine was due to the allosteric inhibition of B. subtilis aspartokinase II by that amino acid, a property which was also observed in extracts of the transformed E. coli strain. The synthesis and degradation of the aspartokinase II subunits were measured by labeling experiments in E. coli transformed with the B. subtilis aspartokinase II gene. In contrast to exponentially growing cells of B. subtilis which contained equimolar amounts of the aspartokinase alpha and beta subunits, the transformed E. coli strain contained a 3-fold molar excess of beta subunit. Pulse-chase experiments showed that the disproportionate level of beta subunit was not due to more rapid turnover of alpha subunit, both subunits being quite stable, but presumably to a more rapid rate of synthesis. After the addition of rifampicin, the synthesis of alpha subunit declined much more rapidly than that of beta subunit, indicating that the two subunits were translated independently from mRNA species that differ in functional stability. In conjunction with the results described in the preceding paper which demonstrated that the aspartokinase subunits are encoded by a single DNA sequence, these observations imply that the alpha and beta subunits of B. subtilis aspartokinase II are the products of in-phase overlapping genes.  相似文献   

8.
Extracts of sporulating cells were found to be defective in vitro translation of phage SP01 ribonucleic acid (RNA) and vegetative Bacillus subtilis RNA. The activity of washed ribosomes from sporulating cells was very similar to that of washed ribosomes from vegetative cells in translating polyuridylic acid, SP01 RNA, and vegetative RNA. The S-150 fraction from either vegetative or sporulating cells grown in Difco sporulation medium contained an apparent inhibitor of protein synthesis. The crude initiation factor fraction from ribosomes of sporulating cells was defective in promoting the initiation factor-dependent translation of SP01 RNA. The crude initiation factor preparations from sporulating cells were as active as the corresponding preparations from vegetative cells in promoting the initiation factor-dependent translation of either phage Qbeta or phage T4 RNA by washed Escherichia coli ribosomes. The crude initiation factors from sporulating cells were perhaps more active than those from vegetative cells in promoting the initiation factor-dependent synthesis of phage T4 lysozyme by E. coli ribosomes. The crude initiation factor preparations from either vegetative or stationary-phase cells of an asporogenous mutant showed similar ability to promote the in vitro translation of SP01 RNA.  相似文献   

9.
It is known that Bacillus subtilis glutamyl-tRNA synthetase (GluRS) mischarges E. coli tRNA1 Gln with glutamate in vitro. It has also been established that the expression of B. subtilis GluRS in Escherichia coli results in the death of the host cell. To ascertain whether E. coli growth inhibition caused by B. subtilis GluRS synthesis is a consequence of Glu-tRNA1 Ghn formation, we constructed an in vivo test system, in which B. subtilis GluRS gene expression is controlled by IPTG. Such a system permits the investigation of factors affecting E. coli growth. Expression of E. coli glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (GlnRS) also ameliorated growth inhibition, presumably by competitively preventing tRNA1 Gln misacylation. However, when amounts of up to 10 mM L-glutamine, the cognate amino acid for acylation of tRNA1 Gln, were added to the growth medium, cell growth was unaffected. Overexpression of the B. subtilis gatCAB gene encoding Glu-tRNAGln amidotransferase (Glu-AdT) rescued cells from toxic effects caused by the formation of the mischarging GluRS. This result indicates that B. subtilis Glu-AdT recognizes the mischarged E. coli GlutRNA1 Gln, and converts it to the cognate Gln-tRNA1 Gln species. B. subtilis GluRS-dependent Glu-tRNA1 Gln formation may cause growth inhibition in the transformed E. coli strain, possibly due to abnormal protein synthesis.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Cells respond to stress conditions by synthesizing general or specific stress proteins. The Ctc protein of Bacillus subtilis belongs to the general stress proteins. The synthesis of Ctc is controlled by an alternative sigma factor of RNA polymerase, sigmaB. Sequence analyses revealed that Ctc is composed of two domains, an N-terminal domain similar to the ribosomal protein L25 of Escherichia coli, and a C-terminal domain. The similarity of the N-terminal domain of Ctc to L25 suggested that Ctc might be a ribosomal protein in B. subtilis. The function of the C-terminal domain is unknown. We purified Ctc to homogeneity and used the pure protein to raise antibodies. Western blot analyses demonstrate that Ctc is induced under stress conditions and can be found in ribosomes of B. subtilis. As observed for its E. coli counterpart L25, Ctc is capable of binding 5S ribosomal RNA in a specific manner. The stress-specific localization of Ctc in B. subtilis ribosomes and the sporulation defect of ctc mutants at high temperatures suggest that Ctc might be required for accurate translation under stress conditions.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Y Inagaki  Y Bessho    S Osawa 《Nucleic acids research》1993,21(6):1335-1338
In Mycoplasma capricolum, a relative of Gram-positive eubacteria with a high genomic AT-content (75%), codon UGA is assigned to tryptophan instead of termination signal. Thus, in this bacterium the release factor 2 (RF-2), that recognizes UAA and UGA termination codons in eubacteria such as Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis, would be either specific to UAA or deleted. To test this, we have constructed a cell-free translation system using synthetic mRNA including codon UAA [mRNA(UAA)], UAG [mRNA(UAG)] and UGA [mRNA(UGA)] in-frame. In the absence of tryptophan, the translation of mRNA(UGA) ceased at UGA sites without appreciable release of the synthesized peptides from the ribosomes, whereas with mRNA(UAA) or mRNA(UAG) the bulk of the peptides was released. Upon addition of the E.coli S-100 fraction or B.subtilis S-100 fraction to the translation system, the synthesized peptides with mRNA(UGA) were almost completely released from the ribosomes, presumably because of the presence of RF-2 active to UGA in the added S-100 fraction. These data suggest that RF-2 is deleted or its activity to UGA is strongly weakened in M.capricolum.  相似文献   

14.
15.
A specific complex of 5 S rRNA and several ribosomal proteins is an integral part of ribosomes in all living organisms. Here we studied the importance of Escherichia coli genes rplE, rplR and rplY, encoding 5 S rRNA-binding ribosomal proteins L5, L18 and L25, respectively, for cell growth, viability and translation. Using recombineering to create gene replacements in the E. coli chromosome, it was shown that rplE and rplR are essential for cell viability, whereas cells deleted for rplY are viable, but grow noticeably slower than the parental strain. The slow growth of these L25-defective cells can be stimulated by a plasmid expressing the rplY gene and also by a plasmid bearing the gene for homologous to L25 general stress protein CTC from Bacillus subtilis. The rplY mutant ribosomes are physically normal and contain all ribosomal proteins except L25. The ribosomes from L25-defective and parental cells translate in vitro at the same rate either poly(U) or natural mRNA. The difference observed was that the mutant ribosomes synthesized less natural polypeptide, compared to wild-type ribosomes both in vivo and in vitro. We speculate that the defect is at the ribosome recycling step.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Four hours after infection of BHK cells by vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), the rate of total protein synthesis was about 65% that of uninfected cells and synthesis of the 12 to 15 predominant cellular polypeptides was reduced to a level about 25% that of control cells. As determined by in vitro translation of isolated RNA and both one- and two-dimensional gel analyses of the products, all predominant cellular mRNA's remained intact and translatable after infection. The total amount of translatable mRNA per cell increased about threefold after infection; this additional mRNA directed synthesis of the five VSV structural proteins. To determine the subcellular localization of cellular and viral mRNA before and after infection, RNA from various sizes of polysomes and nonpolysomal ribonucleoproteins (RNPs) was isolated from infected and noninfected cells and translated in vitro. Over 80% of most predominant species of cellular mRNA was bound to polysomes in control cells, and over 60% was bound in infected cells. Only 2 of the 12 predominant species of translatable cellular mRNA's were localized to the RNP fraction, both in infected and in uninfected cells. The average size of polysomes translating individual cellular mRNA's was reduced about two- to threefold after infection. For example, in uninfected cells, actin (molecular weight 42,000) mRNA was found predominantly on polysomes with 12 ribosomes; after infection it was found on polysomes with five ribosomes, the same size of polysomes that were translating VSV N (molecular weight 52,000) and M (molecular weight 35,000) mRNA. We conclude that the inhibition of cellular protein synthesis after VSV infection is due, in large measure, to competition for ribosomes by a large excess of viral mRNA. The efficiency of initiation of translation on cellular and viral mRNA's is about the same in infected cells; cellular ribosomes are simply distributed among more mRNA's than are present in growing cells. About 20 to 30% of each of the predominant cellular and viral mRNA's were present in RNP particles in infected cells and were presumably inactive in protein synthesis. There was no preferential sequestration of cellular or viral mRNA's in RNPs after infection.  相似文献   

18.
19.
20.
The characteristics of cell-free translation systems prepared from unfertilized eggs and early cleavage stage embryos of the sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, closely reflect the developmentally regulated changes in protein synthesis initiation observed in vivo. Cell-free translation systems prepared over the first 0-6 h following fertilization show gradually increasing activities, mimicking the changes observed in vivo. The mechanisms underlying these increases are complex and occur at several levels. One factor contributing to the rise in protein synthetic rate is the gradual increase in eukaryotic initiation factor (eIF)-4 activity. This is correlated with the progressive inactivation of an inhibitor of eIF-4 function, which can be reactivated by in vitro manipulations. The relatively slow activation of eIF-4 follows similar kinetics to the increased utilization of maternal mRNA and ribosomes, in contrast to the rapid rise in maternal mRNA activation, and the increase in eIF-2B activity. This slow release from eIF-4 inhibition following a rapid release from eIF-2B inhibition and increased mRNA availability is reflected in the pattern of initiator tRNA binding to the small ribosomal subunit observed in cell-free translation systems. In translation systems from unfertilized eggs, initiator tRNA is unable to interact with the small ribosomal subunit, consistent with an initial block in both eIF-2B and eIF-4 activity. In translation systems from 30-min embryos, 48 S preinitiation complexes accumulate, reflecting the release from inhibition of mRNA availability and eIF-2B activity, but continued low activity of eIF-4. The accumulation of initiator tRNA in 48 S preinitiation complexes disappears gradually in translation systems from later embryos, as eIF-4 is slowly released from inhibition.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号