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1.
Summary A temperature-sensitive mutant derived from an E. coli K12 strain, PA3092, was found to have an alteration in the ribosomal protein L19 (Isono et al., 1977). This mutant is a double mutant with a temperature-sensitivity mutation and a mutation leading to the structural alteration of L19 protein. Crosses with various Hfr strains and transductions with P1kc have revealed that the latter mutation maps at 56.4 min, between pheA and alaS. From the fact that two other mutations causing different types of alterations in L19 protein also map at this locus, the gene affected by these mutations was concluded to be the structural gene for the ribosomal protein L19 (rplS).  相似文献   

2.
Summary A mutation in the cyR1 gene of the fungus Podospora anserina confers resistance to cycloheximide and leads to an alteration of the 60S ribosomal protein L21 (Bégueret et al. 1977). Nine revertants of this mutant were isolated and the properties of these strains were analyzed. It was found that one revertant strain contains a new mutant form of L21. It is proposed that the cyR1 gene is the structural gene for protein L21 and that the alteration of this protein is responsible for the resistance to cycloheximide in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Summary An Escherichia coli mutant harbouring altered ribosomal protein L32 has been isolated and genetically characterized. The mutation leading to this alteration (rpmF) and the temperature-sensitive mutation (ts-1517) present in the same strain were found to map near pyrC (23.4 min), being cotransducible not only with pyrC but also with fabD, flaT and purB in P1 phage mediated transductions. Furthermore, we found that the gene rimJ, which encodes an enzyme that acetylates the N-terminal alanine of protein S5 and the temperature-sensitive mutation, ts-386, present in the rimJ mutant strain (Cumberlidge and Isono 1979) also mapped in this region. Thus, the order of genes is deduced to be: ts-386-pyrC-ts-1517-rimJ-flaT-fabD-rpmF-purB.  相似文献   

4.
Summary A suppressor mutation of a temperature-sensitive mutant of ribosomal protein L24 (rplX19) was mapped close to the lon gene by genetic analysis and was shown to affect protease LA. The degradation and the synthesis rates of individual ribosomal proteins were determined. Proteins L24, L14, L15 and L27 were found to be degraded faster in the original rplX19 mutant than in the rplX19 mutant containing the suppressor mutation. Other ribosomal proteins were either weakly or not at all degraded in both mutants. Temperature-sensitive growth was also suppressed by the overproduction of mutant protein L24 from a plasmid. Our results suggest that (1) either free ribosomal proteins or proteins bound to abortive assembly precursors are highly susceptible to the lon gene product and (2) the mutationally altered protein L24 can still function at the nonpermissive growth temperature of the mutant, if it is present in sufficient amounts.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Summary 26 cold-resistant revertants of a cold-sensitiveEscherichia coli mutant with an altered ribosomal protein S8 were analyzed for their ribosomal protein pattern by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. It was found that 16 of them had acquired the apparent wild-type form of protein S8, one exhibits a more strongly altered S8 than the original mutant and two revertants regained the wild-type form of S8 and, in addition, possess alterations in protein L30. The ribosomes of the residual revertants showed no detectable difference from those of the parental S8 mutant.The mutation leading to the more strongly altered S8 was genetically not separable from the primary S8 mutation; this indicates that both mutations are very close to each other or at the same site. The structural gene for ribosomal protein L30 was mapped relative to two other ribosomal protein genes (for proteins S5 and S8) by the aid of one of the L30 mutants: The relative order obtained is:aroE....rpmD(L30)....rpsE(S5)....rpsH(S8)....THe L30 mutation impairs growth and ribosomal assembly at 20°C and is therefore the first example of a mutant with a defined 50S alteration that has (partial) cold-sensitive ribosome assembly. A double mutant was constructed which possesses both the S8 and the L30 mutations. It was found that the L30 mutation had a slight antagonistic effect on the growth inhibition caused by the S8 mutation. Thus the L30 mutants might have possibly arisen from the original S8 mutants first as S8/L30 double mutants which was followed by the loss of the original S8 lesion.  相似文献   

7.
Localized P1 mutagenesis was used to screen for conditionally lethal mutations in ribosomal protein genes. One such mutation, 2859mis, has been mapped inside the ribosomal protein gene cluster at 72 minutes on the Escherichia coli chromosome and cotransduces at 98% with rpsE (S5). The 2869mis mutation leads to thermosensitivity and impaired assembly in vivo of 50 S ribosomal particles at 42 °C. The strain carrying the mutation has an altered L24 ribosomal protein which at 42 °C shows weaker affinity for 23 S RNA than the wild-type protein. The mutational alteration involves a replacement of glycine by aspartic acid in protein L24 from the mutant. We conclude therefore that the 2859mis mutation affects the structural gene for protein L24 (rplX).  相似文献   

8.
Summary Two spontaneous mutants of Escherichia coli strain KMBL-146 selected for resistance to the aminoglycoside antibiotic neamine show severe restriction of amber suppressors in vivo. Purified ribosomes from the mutant strains exhibit low neamine-induced misreading in vitro and a decreased affinity for the related antibiotic streptomycin.Biochemical analysis shows that the mutants each have two modified 30S ribosomal proteins, S12 and S5. In agreement with these results, genetic analysis shows that two mutations are present, neither of which confers resistance to neamine by itself; the mutation located in gene rpxL (the structural gene for protein S12) confers streptomycin dependence but this dependence is suppressed in the presence of the second mutation, located in gene rpxE (the structural gene for protein S5).  相似文献   

9.
Summary The phenotype of a kasugamycin dependent mutant, MV17, was found to be the product of a kasugamycin resistance mutation in ksgA, together with a dependentizing mutation in rplW, the gene for large ribosomal subunit protein L23. Revertants from dependence on this small subunit targeted antibiotic were found to have mutational alterations in ribosomal proteins L23, L1, L11, and S9. The mutations causing alterations in L1 and L23 were shown to be responsible for the reversion and that altering L11 to be involved in the reversion.  相似文献   

10.
A temperature-sensitive, protein synthesis-defective mutant ofEscherichia coli exhibiting an altered ribosomal protein L22 has been investigated. The temperature-sensitive mutation was mapped to therplV gene for protein L22. The genes from the wild type and mutant strains were amplified by the polymerase chain reaction and the products were sequenced. A cytosine to thymine transition at position 22 of the coding sequence was found in the mutant DNA, predicting an arginine to cysteine alteration in the protein. A single cysteine residue was found in the isolated mutant protein. This amino acid change accounts for the altered mobility of the mutant protein in two-dimensional gels and during reversed-phase HPLC. The temperature-sensitive phenotype was fully complemented by a plasmid carrying the wild type L22 gene. Ribosomes from the complemented cells showed only wild type protein L22 by two dimensional gel analysis and were as heat-resistant as control ribosomes in a translation assay. The point mutation in the L22 gene is uniquely responsible for the temperature-sensitivity of this strain.  相似文献   

11.
Summary A mutant of Escherichia coli K12 has been isolated which shows an alteration in the ribosomal protein S18. Genetic analyses have revealed that the mutation causing this alteration maps at 99.3 min of the E. coli genetic map, between dnaC and deo. This indicated that the mutation has occurred in a gene different from the structural gene for this protein which has been located at 94 min. From the N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis it is concluded that the mutation has resulted in loss of the N-terminal acetyl group of this protein. The gene which is affected in this mutant is termed rimI that most likely specifies an enzyme acetylating the N-terminal alanine of protein S18. The mutation does not affect the acetylation of two other ribosomal proteins, S5 and L12, both of which are known to be acetylated in wild-type E. coli K12.  相似文献   

12.
The Synechococcus sp. PCC7942 strain carrying a missense mutation in the peptide-binding domain of DnaK3, one of the essential dnaK gene products, revealed temperature-sensitive growth. We also isolated suppressor mutants of this strain. One of the suppressors was mapped in the ribosomal protein gene rpl24 (syc1876), which encodes the 50S ribosomal protein L24. Subcellular localization of three DnaK proteins was determined, and the results indicated that a quantity of DnaK3 was dislocated from membrane-bound polysomes when dnaK3 temperature-sensitive mutant was incubated at non-permissive temperatures. Furthermore, we examined the photosystem II reaction center protein D1 and detected a translational intermediate polypeptide in membrane-bound polysome fractions prepared from dnaK3 temperature-sensitive cells grown at high temperature. These characteristic features of DnaK3 localizations and detection of D1 protein intermediate were not observed in the suppressor mutant even at high temperatures.  相似文献   

13.
Summary A heat-sensitive mutant of Neurospora crassa, strain 4M(t), was isolated using ultraviolet-light mutagenesis followed by the inositol-less death enrichment technique. The heat-sensitivity is the result of a single gene mutation which maps to the distal end of the right arm of linkage group II. The mutation defines the rip-1 gene locus. Both conidial germination and mycelial extension are inhibited in the mutant at 35°C and above (the nonpermissive temperature) but prolonged incubation at that temperature is not lethal to either cell type. Analysis of the lateral mycelial growth rates of wild type and of the rip-1 mutant at a variety of temperatures between 10 and 40°C indicated that the maximal growth rate occurs at 35°C in the wild type, and at 25°C in the rip-1 strain. The rip-1 mutant grows 239-times slower at 35°C than at 25°C, whereas the wild type grows 1.4-times faster. Temperature shift-up experiments showed that even 3 h at 20°C is not sufficient to allow germination at 37°C, thereby showing that the mutant cannot accumulate enough heat-sensitive product at the permissive temperature to contribute to germination at 37°C. The reciprocal temperature shift-down experiments showed that the molecular events at 37°C may be qualitatively useful for germination after shifting to 20°C. Studies of macromolecular synthesis showed that the biochemical defect in the heat-sensitive strain appears to affect RNA synthesis before protein synthesis, although there were differences in the relative effects depending on the age of the germinating conidia and the inhibition of the two processes was never complete. Messenger RNA synthesis is normal in the mutant at 37°C. Previous work has shown that the rip-1 mutant strain has a conditional defect in the accumulation of 25S rRNA and, hence, in 60S ribosomal subunit production (Loo et al. 1981). There are also indications from those studies that the 60S ribosomal subunit may be functionally impaired at the higher temperature. Thus, the growth and macromolecular synthesis phenotypes may result as a consequence of a conditional, ribosome function defect and leads to the hypothesis that the mutation in the rip-1 strain may be in a gene for a 60S ribosomal subunit component, perhaps a ribosomal protein.  相似文献   

14.
Yin T  Pan G  Liu H  Wu J  Li Y  Zhao Z  Fu T  Zhou Y 《Planta》2012,235(5):907-921
Embryogenesis in higher plants is controlled by a complex gene network. Identification and characterization of genes essential for embryogenesis will provide insights into the early events in embryo development. In this study, a novel mutant with aborted seed development (asd) was identified in Arabidopsis. The asd mutant produced about 25% of albino seeds at the early stage of silique development. The segregation of normal and albino seeds was inherited as a single recessive embryo-lethal trait. The gene disrupted in the asd mutant was isolated through map-based cloning. The mutated gene contains a single base change (A to C) in the coding region of RPL21C (At1g35680) that is predicted to encode the chloroplast 50S ribosomal protein L21. Allele test with other two T-DNA insertion lines in RPL21C and a complementation test demonstrated that the mutation in RPL21C was responsible for the asd phenotype. RPL21C exhibits higher expression in leaves and flowers compared with expression levels in roots and developing seeds. The RPL21C–GFP fusion protein was localized in chloroplasts. Cytological observations showed that the asd embryo development was arrested at the globular stage. There were no plastids with normal thylakoids and as a result no normal chloroplasts formed in mutant cells, indicating an indispensable role of the ASD gene in chloroplasts biogenesis. Our studies suggest that the chloroplast ribosomal protein L21 gene is required for chloroplast development and embryogenesis in Arabidopsis.  相似文献   

15.
Summary AS9-1 was isolated as a mutation restoring growth in a strain carrying the ribosomal mutation su12-1. The AS9-1 mutation confers a weak antisuppressor effect and a low level of resistance to paromomycin. Two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis patterns of the ribosomal proteins from AS9-1 strains show an altered S9 protein which is more basic than the wild-type form. The presence of the two forms of the protein (wild-type and mutant) in heterocaryotic strains strongly suggests that AS9 is the structural gene for the ribosomal protein S9.  相似文献   

16.
A mutant of Escherichia coli strain CR341, originally isolated as a temperature-sensitive mutant, was found to have an altered 30 S ribosomal protein (S18) in addition to and independently of temperature sensitivity. Protein S18 from the mutant strain differs in electrophoretic mobility in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis at pH 4.5 from protein S18 of the parental origin. The mutation responsible for the alteration in S18 is different from two other mutations in the mutant strain which give the temperature-sensitive phenotype. The gene involved in the S18 alteration is located in a region between 76 and 88 minutes on the E. coli genetic map; the location is outside the str-spc region at 64 minutes, where several known ribosomal protein genes are located. An episome covering the loci rha (76 min) through pyr B (84 min) was introduced into the mutant. The resultant merodiploid strains were shown to produce both the normal and the mutant forms of S18. The results support the conclusion described in the accompanying paper (Kahan et al., 1973) that the mutation studied is in the structural gene for S18.  相似文献   

17.
The prmA gene, located at 72 min on the Escherichia coli chromosome, is the genetic determinant of ribosomal protein L11-methyltransferase activity. Mutations at this locus, prmA1 and prmA3, result in a severely undermethylated form of L11. No effect, other than the lack of methyl groups on L11, has been ascribed to these mutations. DNA sequence analysis of the mutant alleles prmA1 and prmA3 detected point mutations near the C-terminus of the protein and plasmids overproducing the wild-type and the two mutant proteins have been constructed. The wild-type PrmA protein could be crosslinked to its radiolabelled substrate, S-adenosyl-L -methionine (SAM), by u.v. irradiation indicating that it is the gene for the methyltransferase rather than a regulatory protein. One of the mutant proteins, PrmA3, was also weakly crosslinked to SAM. Both mutant enzymes when expressed from the overproducing plasmids were capable of catalysing the incorporation of 3H-labelled methyl groups from SAM to L11 in vitro. This confirmed the observation that the mutant proteins possess significant residual activity which could account for their lack of growth phenotype. However, a strain carrying an in vitro-constructed null mutation of the prmA gene, transferred to the E. coli chromosome by homologous recombination, was perfectly viable.  相似文献   

18.
Summary In this article we describe some in vivo properties of a coldsensitive ribosomal mutant from Escherichia coli. The mutation affects the rplV gene which is the structural gene of ribosomal protein L22.Our work shows that at 22°C, the biosynthesis of both ribosomal subunits and the maturation processing of 16S and 23S ribosomal RNA are impaired. Integration of our results in a general model of in vivo ribosomal assembly in E. coli is presented.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Summary Among mutants of E. coli selected for temperaturesensitive growth, four were found to possess alterations in ribosomal proteins L7/L12. Of these, three apparently lack protein L7, the acetylated form of protein L12. Genetic analyses have revealed that the mutation responsible for this alteration maps at a locus around 34 min of the current E. coli genetic map, which is clearly different from the location for the structural gene for protein L7/L12 which is situated at 89 min. Hence, the gene affected in these mutants was termed rimL. Tryptic and thermolysin fingerprints of the protein L12 purified from the rimL mutants showed a profile indistinguishable from that of wild-type protein. It was found that the acetylase activity specific for protein L12 was negligible, when assayed in vitro, in the high-speed supernatant prepared from mutant cells. These results indicated that the three mutants contain mutations in the gene rimL that codes for an acetylating enzyme specific for ribosomal protein L12.Previous paper in this series is Isono and Isono (1980)  相似文献   

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