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1.
Transfer RNAs from Escherichia coli, yeast (Sacharomyces cerevisiae), and calf liver were subjected to controlled hydrolysis with venom exonuclease to remove 3'-terminal nucleotides, and then reconstructed successively with cytosine triphosphate (CTP) and 2'- or 3'-deoxyadenosine 5'-triphosphate in the presence of yeast CTP(ATP):tRNA nucleotidyltransferase. The modified tRNAs were purified by chromatography on DBAE-cellulose or acetylated DBAE-cellulose and then utilized in tRNA aminoacylation experiments in the presence of the homologous aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase activities. The E. coli, yeast, and calf liver aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases specific for alanine, glycine, histidine, lysine, serine, and threonine, as well as the E. coli and yeast prolyl-tRNA synthetases and the yeast glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase utilized only those homologous modified tRNAs terminating in 2'-deoxyadenosine (i.e., having an available 3'-OH group). This is interpreted as evidence that these aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases normally aminoacylate their unmodified cognate tRNAs on the 3'-OH group. The aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases from all three sources specific argining, isoleucine, leucine, phenylalanine, and valine, as well as the E. coli and yeast enzymes specific for methionine and the E. coli glutamyl-tRNA synthetase, used as substrates exclusively those tRNAs terminating in 3'-deoxyadenosine. Certain aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, including the E. coli, yeast, and calf liver asparagine and tyrosine activating enzymes, the E. coli and yeast cysteinyl-tRNA synthetases, and the aspartyl-tRNA synthetase from yeast, utilized both isomeric tRNAs as substrates, although generally not at the same rate. While the calf liver aspartyl- and cysteinyl-tRNA synthetases utilized only the corresponding modified tRNA species terminating in 2'-deoxyadenosine, the use of a more concentrated enzyme preparation might well result in aminoacylation of the isomeric species. The one tRNA for which positional specificity does seem to have changed during evolution is tryptophan, whose E. coli aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase utilized predominantly the cognate tRNA terminating in 3'-deoxyadenosine, while the corresponding yeast and calf liver enzymes were found to utilize predominantly the isomeric tRNAs terminating in 2'-deoxyadenosine. The data presented indicate that while there is considerable diversity in the initial position of aminoacylation of individual tRNA isoacceptors derived from a single source, positional specificity has generally been conserved during the evolution from a prokaryotic to mammalian organism.  相似文献   

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Ribosome binding by tRNAs with fluorescent labeled 3'' termini.   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Yeast and E. coli tRNAPhe samples were oxidized and labeled at the 3' end with dansyl hydrazine or fluorescein thiosemicarbazide. These tRNAs can bind to poly(U)-programmed E. coli 70S tight couple ribosomes in 25 mM magnesium at 8 degrees C. Two binding sites with binding constants of about 1 X 10(9) M-1 (P) and 3 X 10(7) M-1 (A) were determined for the yeast tRNAPhe derivatives. With E. coli tRNAPhe the A site affinity is similar to yeast tRNAPhe but the P site affinity is 5-fold weaker. Singlet-singlet energy transfer showd that the distance from the 3' end of tRNAPhe in the P site to a fluorescein derivative of erythromycin is 23 A. This supports in vitro studies suggesting that erythromycin binds near the peptide moiety of peptidyl tRNA. A distance of 34 A between the 3' ends of 2 tRNAs bound simulatneously on the ribosome was also measured. This long distance may mean that the deacylated fluorescent tRNA binds to the A site in an orientation like that in the stringent response rather than in protein synthesis.  相似文献   

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Little is known about the conservation of determinants for the identities of tRNAs between organisms. We showed previously that Escherichia coli tyrosine tRNA synthetase can charge the Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondrial tyrosine tRNA in vivo, even though there are substantial sequence differences between the yeast mitochondrial and bacterial tRNAs. The S. cerevisiae cytoplasmic tyrosine tRNA differs in sequence from both its yeast mitochondrial and E. coli counterparts. To test whether the yeast cytoplasmic tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase recognizes the E. coli tRNA, we expressed various amounts of an E. coli tyrosine tRNA amber suppressor in S. cerevisiae. The bacterial tRNA did not suppress any of three yeast amber alleles, suggesting that the yeast enzymes retain high specificity in vivo for their homologous tRNAs. Moreover, the nucleotides in the sequence of the E. coli suppressor that are not shared with the yeast cytoplasmic tyrosine tRNA do not create determinants which are efficiently recognized by other yeast charging enzymes. Therefore, at least some of the determinants that influence in vivo recognition of the tyrosine tRNA are specific to the cell compartment and organism. In contrast, expression of the cognate bacterial tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase together with the bacterial suppressor tRNA led to suppression of all three amber alleles. The bacterial enzyme recognized its substrate in vivo, even when the amount of bacterial tRNA was less than about 0.05% of that of the total cytoplasmic tRNA.  相似文献   

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Methylation of tRNA at the N-1 position of guanosine to form m(1)G occurs widely in nature. It occurs at position 37 in tRNAs from all three kingdoms, and the methyltransferase that catalyzes this reaction is known from previous work of others to be critically important for cell growth in Escherichia coli and the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. m(1)G is also widely found at position 9 in eukaryotic tRNAs, but the corresponding methyltransferase was unknown. We have used a biochemical genomics approach with a collection of purified yeast GST-ORF fusion proteins to show that m(1)G(9) formation of yeast tRNA(Gly) is associated with ORF YOL093w, named TRM10. Extracts lacking Trm10p have undetectable levels of m(1)G(9) methyltransferase activity but retain normal m(1)G(37) methyltransferase activity. Yeast Trm10p purified from E. coli quantitatively modifies the G(9) position of tRNA(Gly) in an S-adenosylmethionine-dependent fashion. Trm10p is responsible in vivo for most if not all m(1)G(9) modification of tRNAs, based on two results: tRNA(Gly) purified from a trm10-Delta/trm10-Delta strain is lacking detectable m(1)G; and a primer extension block occurring at m(1)G(9) is removed in trm10-Delta/trm10-Delta-derived tRNAs for all 9 m(1)G(9)-containing species that were testable by this method. There is no obvious growth defect of trm10-Delta/trm10-Delta strains. Trm10p bears no detectable resemblance to the yeast m(1)G(37) methyltransferase, Trm5p, or its orthologs. Trm10p homologs are found widely in eukaryotes and many archaea, with multiple homologs in several metazoans, including at least three in humans.  相似文献   

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We have used the temperature-jump relaxation technique to determine the kinetic and thermodynamic parameters for the association between the following tRNAs pairs having complementary anticodons: tRNA(Ser) with tRNA(Gly), tRNA(Cys) with tRNA(Ala) and tRNA(Trp) with tRNA(Pro). The anticodon sequence of E. coli tRNA(Ser), GGA, is complementary to the U*CC anticodon of E. coli tRNA(Gly(2] (where U* is a still unknown modified uridine base) and A37 is not modified in none of these two tRNAs. E. coli tRNA(Ala) has a VGC anticodon (V is 5-oxyacetic acid uridine) while tRNA(Cys) has the complementary GCA anticodon with a modified adenine on the 3' side, namely 2-methylthio N6-isopentenyl adenine (mS2i6A37) in E. Coli tRNA(Cys) and N6-isopentenyl adenine (i6A37) in yeast tRNA(Cys). The brewer yeast tRNA(Trp) (anticodon CmCA) differs from the wild type E. coli tRNA(Trp) (anticodon CCA) in several positions of the nucleotide sequence. Nevertheless, in the anticodon loop, only two interesting differences are present: A37 is not modified while C34 at the first anticodon position is modified into a ribose 2'-O methyl derivative (Cm). The corresponding complementary tRNA is E.coli tRNA(Pro) with the VGG anticodon. Our results indicate a dominant effect of the nature and sequence of the anticodon bases and their nearest neighbor in the anticodon loop (particularly at position 37 on the 3' side); no detectable influence of modifications in the other tRNA stems has been detected. We found a strong stabilizing effect of the methylthio group on i6A37 as compared to isopentenyl modification of the same residue. We have not been able so far to assess the effect of isopentenyl modification alone in comparison to unmodified A37. The results obtained with the complex yeast tRNA(Trp)-E.coli tRNA(Pro) also suggest that a modification of C34 to Cm34 does not significantly increase the stability of tRNA(Trp) association with its complementary anticodon in tRNA(Pro). The observations are discussed in the light of inter- and intra-strand stacking interactions among the anticodon triplets and with the purine base adjacent to them, and of possible biological implications.  相似文献   

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The imino region of the proton NMR spectrum of Escherichia coli tRNA3Gly has been assigned mainly by sequential nuclear Overhauser effects between neighbouring base pairs and by comparison of assignments of other tRNAs. The effects of magnesium, spermine and temperature on the 1H and 31P NMR spectra of this tRNA were studied. Both ions affect resonances close to the G15 . C48 tertiary base pair and in the ribosylthymine loop. The magnesium studies indicate the presence of an altered tRNA conformer at low magnesium concentrations in equilibrium with the high magnesium form. The temperature studies show that the A7 . U66 imino proton (from a secondary base pair) melts before some of the tertiary hydrogen bonds and that the anticodon stem does not melt sequentially from the ends. Correlation of the ion effects in the 1H and 31P NMR spectra has led to the tentative assignment of two 31P resonances not assigned in the comparable 31P NMR spectrum of yeast tRNAPhe. 31P NMR spectra of E. coli tRNA3Gly lack resolved peaks corresponding to peaks C and F in the spectra of E. coli tRNAPhe and yeast tRNAPhe. In the latter tRNAs these peaks have been assigned to phosphate groups in the anticodon loop. Ion binding E. coli tRNA3Gly and E. coli tRNAPhe had different effects on their 1H NMR spectra which may reflect further differences in their charge distribution and conformation.  相似文献   

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Individual species of tRNA from Escherichia coli were treated with hydrazine/3 M NaCl to modify cytidine residues. The chemically modified tRNAs were used as substrate for ATP/CTP: tRNA nucleotidyltransferases from E. coli and yeast, with [alpha-32P]ATP as cosubstrate. tRNAs that were labeled were analyzed for their content of modified cytidines. Cytidines at positions 74 and 75 were found to be required chemically intact for interaction with both enzymes. C56 was also required intact by the E. coli enzyme in all tRNAs, and by the yeast enzyme in several instances. C61 was found to be important in seven of 14 tRNAs with the E. coli enzyme but only in four of 13 tRNAs with that from yeast. Our results support a model in which nucleotidyltransferase extends from the 3' end of its tRNA substrate across the top of the stacked array of bases in the accepter- and psi-stems to the corner of the molecule where the D- and psi-loops are juxtaposed.  相似文献   

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Site specificities of three transfer RNA methyltransferases from yeast   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The site specificities of two distinct tRNA(m1G)methyltransferases and one tRNA(m2G)methyltransferase from yeast have been investigated by heterologous methylation and analysis of purified Escherichia coli tRNAs. The two tRNA(m1G)methyltransferases were found to be specific for sites 9 and 37, respectively. The tRNA(m2G)methyltransferase was specific for site 10. Two of the enzymes were purified by affinity chromatography on tRNA-Sepharose.  相似文献   

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Two methionine tRNAs from yeast mitochondria have been purified. The mitochondrial initiator tRNA has been identified by formylation using a mitochondrial enzyme extract. E. coli transformylase however, does not formylate the yeast mitochondrial initiator tRNA. The sequence was determined using both 32P-in vivo labeled and 32P-end labeled mt tRNAf(Met). This tRNA, unlike N. crassa mitochondrial tRNAf(Met), has two structural features typical of procaryotic initiator tRNAs: (i) it lacks a Watson-Crick base-pair at the end of the acceptor stem and (ii) has a T-psi-C-A sequence in loop IV. However, both yeast and N. crassa mitochondrial initiator tRNAs have a U11:A24 base-pair in the D-stem unlike procaryotic initiator tRNAs which have A11:U24. Interestingly, both mitochondrial initiator tRNAs, as well as bean chloroplast tRNAf(Met), have only two G:C pairs next to the anticodon loop, unlike any other initiator tRNA whatever its origin. In terms of overall sequence homology, yeast mitochondrial tRNA(Met)f differs from both procaryotic or eucaryotic initiator tRNAs, showing the highest homology with N. crassa mitochondrial initiator tRNA.  相似文献   

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