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1.
The chromatographic elution profiles of tRNA-A sn, tRNA-A sp, tRNA-H is and tRNA-T y r from SV40-transformed BALB-3T3 cells grown in fetal calf serum or cald serum-supplemented media have been examined. The relative proportions of certain of the isoaccepting species of these four tRNAs are altered in a similar fashion depending on the serum type. It is suggested that the elution profile alterations reflect the extent of modifications of a specific G residue to the minor nucleoside Q, and that this process differs between untransformed and transformed cells. In addition, cell density appears to influence the Q content of these tRNAs, though other density-dependent tRNA modifications also appear to occur.  相似文献   

2.
The lysine isoacceptor tRNAs differ in two aspects from the majority of the other mammalian tRNA species: they do not contain ribosylthymine (T) in loop IV, and a 'new' lysine tRNA, which is practically absent in non-dividing tissue, appears at elevated levels in proliferating cells. We have therefore purified the three major isoaccepting lysine tRNAs from rabbit liver and the 'new' lysine tRNA isolated from SV40-transformed mouse fibroblasts, and determined their nucleotide sequences. Our basic findings are as follows. a) The three major lysine tRNAs (species 1, 2 and 3) from rabbit liver contain 2'-O-methylribosylthymine (Tm) in place of T. tRNA1Lys and tRNA2Lys differ only by a single base pair in the middle of the anticodon stem; the anticodon sequence C-U-U is followed by N-threonyl-adenosine (t6A). TRNA3Lys has the anticodon S-U-U and contains two highly modified thionucleosides, S (shown to be 2-thio-5-carboxymethyl-uridine methyl ester) and a further modified derivative of t6 A (2-methyl-thio-N6-threonyl-adenosine) on the 3' side of the anticodon. tRNA3Lys differs in 14 and 16 positions, respectively, from the other two isoacceptors. b) Protein synthesis in vitro, using synthetic polynucleotides of defined sequence, showed that tRNA2Lys with anticodon C-U-U recognized A-A-G only, whereas tRNA3Lys, which contains thio-nucleotides in and next to the anticodon, decodes both lysine codons A-A-G and A-A-A, but with a preference for A-A-A. In a globin-mRNA-translating cell-free system from ascites cells, both lysine tRNAs donated lysine into globin. The rate and extent of lysine incorporation, however, was higher with tRNA2Lys than with tRNA3Lys, in agreement with the fact that alpha-globin and beta-globin mRNAs contain more A-A-G than A-A-A- codons for lysine. c) A comparison of the nucleotide sequences of lysine tRNA species 1, 2 and 3 from rabbit liver, with that of the 'new' tRNA4Lys from transformed and rapidly dividing cells showed that this tRNA is not the product of a new gene or group of genes, but is an undermodified tRNA derived exclusively from tRNA2Lys. Of the two dihydrouridines present in tRNA2Lys, one is found as U in tRNA4Lys; the purine next to the anticodon is as yet unidentified but is known not be t6 A. In addition we have found U, T and psi besides Tm as the first nucleoside in loop IV.  相似文献   

3.
Sequence determinants for the importation of tRNAs into the mitochondrion of Leishmania tarentolae in vivo were investigated. tRNA(Ile)(UAU) is exclusively localized within the mitochondrion and tRNA(Gln)(CUG) exclusively in the cytosol (Lye LF, Chen DHT, Suyama Y, 1993, Mol Biochem Parasitol 58:233-246; Shi X, Chen DHT, Suyama Y, 1994, Mol Biochem Parasitol 65:23-37). L. tarentolae cells were transfected with plasmids encoding either tRNA(Ile) or tRNA (Gln) that were tagged with altered sequences in the D loop, permitting discrimination from the endogenous tRNAs. Primer extension analysis was used to show that the plasmid-encoded genes were expressed and that the tagged tRNAs showed a similar intracellular localization as the endogenous tRNAs. Exchange or deletion of the 5'-flanking genomic sequences had no effect on the expression or mitochondrial localization of the tagged tRNA(Ile) or on the expression or cytosolic localization of the tagged tRNA(Gln), suggesting that the signals for importation are localized within the tRNA itself. Swapping the D loop+stem from the exclusively cytosolic tRNA(Gln) with that from the tRNA(Ile) produced a partial mitochondrial localization of the plasmid-expressed mutated tRNA(Gln). However, D loop exchange did not eliminate the mitochondrial localization of the plasmid-expressed mutated tRNA(Ile), suggesting that tertiary structure or additional sequence elements may be involved in the importation signal.  相似文献   

4.
mRNA translation is regulated by diverse mechanisms that converge at the initiation and elongation steps to determine the rate, profile, and localization of proteins synthesized. A consistently relevant feature of these mechanisms is the spatial re-distribution of translation machinery, a process of particular importance in neural cells. This process has, however, been largely overlooked with respect to its potential role in regulating the local concentration of cytoplasmic tRNAs, even as a multitude of data suggest that spatial regulation of the tRNA pool may help explain the remarkably high rates of peptide elongation. Here, we report that Cy3/Cy5-labeled bulk tRNAs transfected into neural cells distribute into granule-like structures – “tRNA granules” – that exhibit dynamic mixing of tRNAs between granules and rapid, bi-directional vectorial movement within neurites. Imaging of endogenous tRNAgly and tRNAlys by fluorescent in situ hybridization revealed a similar granular distribution of tRNAs in somata and neurites; this distribution was highly overlapping with granules imaged by introduction of exogenous Cy5-tRNAthr and Cy3-tRNAval. A subset of tRNA granules located in the cell body, neurite branch points and growth cones displayed fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between Cy3 and Cy5-labeled tRNAs indicative of translation, and co-localization with elongation machinery. A population of smaller, rapidly trafficked granules in neurites lacked FRET and showed poor colocalization with translation initiation and elongation factors, suggesting that they are a translationally inactive tRNA transport particle. Our data suggest that tRNAs are packaged into granules that are rapidly transported to loci where translation is needed, where they may greatly increase the local concentration of tRNAs in support of efficient elongation. The potential implications of this newly described structure for channeling of elongation, local translation, and diseases associated with altered tRNA levels or function are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The 54K cellular tumor antigen has been translated in vitro, using messenger ribonucleic acids from simian virus 40 (SV40)-transformed cells or 3T3 cells. The in vitro 54K product could be immunoprecipitated with SV40 tumor serum and had a peptide map that was similar, but not identical, to the in vivo product. The levels of this 54K protein in SV3T3 cells were significantly higher than those detected in 3T3 cells (D. I. H. Linzer, W. Maltzman, and A. J. Levine, Virology 98:308-318, 1979). In spite of this, the levels of translatable 54K messenger ribonucleic acid from 3T3 and SV3T3 cells were roughly equivalent or often greater in 3T3 cells. Pulse-chase experiments with the 54K protein from 3T3 or SV3T3 cells demonstrated that this protein, once synthesized, was rapidly degraded in 3T3 cells but was extremely stable in SV3T3 cells. Similarly, in an SV40 tsA-transformed cell line, temperature sensitive for the SV40 T-antigen, the 54K protein was rapidly turned over at the nonpermissive temperature and stable at the permissive temperature, whereas the levels of translatable 54K messenger ribonucleic acid at each temperature were roughly equal. These results demonstrate a post-translational regulation of the 54K cellular tumor antigen and suggest that this control is mediated by the SV40 large T-antigen.  相似文献   

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8.
Trypanosoma brucei lacks mitochondrial genes encoding tRNAs and must import nuclearly encoded tRNAs from the cytosol. The mechanism and specificity of this process remain unclear. We have identified a unique sequence motif, YGG(C/A)RRC, upstream of the genes encoding mitochondrially localized tRNAs in T. brucei. Both in vitro import studies and in vivo transfection studies indicate that deletion of the YGG(C/A)RRC sequence alters mitochondrial localization of tRNA(Leu), and in vivo studies also show a decrease in the cellular abundance of tRNA(Leu). These studies provide direct evidence for cis-acting RNA motifs within precursor tRNAs that facilitate the selection of tRNAs for mitochondrial import in trypanosomes. Furthermore, we found that mutations to the YGG(C/A)RRC sequence also altered the intracellular distribution of other endogenous tRNAs, suggesting a general role for this sequence in tRNA trafficking in trypanosomes.  相似文献   

9.
The role of exportin-t in selective nuclear export of mature tRNAs.   总被引:21,自引:1,他引:20       下载免费PDF全文
Exportin-t (Xpo-t) is a vertebrate nuclear export receptor for tRNAs that binds tRNA cooperatively with GTP-loaded Ran. Xpo-t antibodies are shown to efficiently block tRNA export from Xenopus oocyte nuclei suggesting that it is responsible for at least the majority of tRNA export in these cells. We examine the mechanism by which Xpo-t-RanGTP specifically exports mature tRNAs rather than other forms of nuclear RNA, including tRNA precursors. Chemical and enzymatic footprinting together with phosphate modification interference reveals an extensive interaction between the backbone of the TPsiC and acceptor arms of tRNAPhe and Xpo-t-RanGTP. Analysis of mutant or precursor tRNA forms demonstrates that, aside from these recognition elements, accurate 5' and 3' end-processing of tRNA affects Xpo-t-RanGTP interaction and nuclear export, while aminoacylation is not essential. Intron-containing, end-processed, pre-tRNAs can be bound by Xpo-t-RanGTP and are rapidly exported from the nucleus if Xpo-t is present in excess. These results suggest that at least two mechanisms are involved in discrimination of pre-tRNAs and mature tRNAs prior to nuclear export.  相似文献   

10.
Here we demonstrate a new regulatory mechanism for tRNA processing in Escherichia coli whereby RNase T and RNase PH, the two primary 3′ → 5′ exonucleases involved in the final step of 3′-end maturation, compete with poly(A) polymerase I (PAP I) for tRNA precursors in wild-type cells. In the absence of both RNase T and RNase PH, there is a >30-fold increase of PAP I-dependent poly(A) tails that are ≤10 nt in length coupled with a 2.3- to 4.2-fold decrease in the level of aminoacylated tRNAs and a >2-fold decrease in growth rate. Only 7 out of 86 tRNAs are not regulated by this mechanism and are also not substrates for RNase T, RNase PH or PAP I. Surprisingly, neither PNPase nor RNase II has any effect on tRNA poly(A) tail length. Our data suggest that the polyadenylation of tRNAs by PAP I likely proceeds in a distributive fashion unlike what is observed with mRNAs.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Isoaccepting tRNAs from various mouse cells were fractionated on columns of benzoylated DEAE cellulose. Lysine tRNA from mouse embryo, adult mouse liver and kidney, primary mouse embryo cells in tissue culture, and an established tissue culture line of mouse fibroblasts (3T3) has two peaks of isoaccepting tRNA; lysine tRNA from two established lines of polyoma virus-transformed cells contains an additional peak of lysine tRNA. The extra peak in transformed cells comprises about 25% of the acceptor capacity for lysine. It is stable to denaturation and renaturation and can be chromatographed, stripped of lysine, recharged, and rechromatographed. The extra peak is present in tRNA from transformed cells and absent in tRNA from normal cells regardless of whether the lysyl-tRNA ligase used for aminoacylation is from normal or transformed cells. Isoaccepting tRNAs for arginine, leucine, serine, valine, histidine, and tyrosine reveal similar profiles for the various tRNAs from normal and transformed cells.  相似文献   

13.
Amber, ochre and opal suppressor tRNA genes have been generated by using oligonucleotide directed site-specific mutagenesis to change one or two nucleotides in a human serine tRNA gene. The amber and ochre suppressor (Su+) tRNA genes are efficiently expressed in CV-1 cells when introduced as part of a SV40 recombinant. The expressed amber and ochre Su+ tRNAs are functional as suppressors as demonstrated by readthrough of the amber codon which terminates the NS1 gene of an influenza virus or the ochre codon which terminates the hexon gene of adenovirus, respectively. Interestingly, several attempts to obtain the equivalent virus stock of an SV40 recombinant containing the opal suppressor tRNA gene yielded virus lacking the opal suppressor tRNA gene. This suggests that expression of an efficient opal suppressor derived from a human serine tRNA gene is highly detrimental to either cellular or viral processes.  相似文献   

14.
C P Rusconi  T R Cech 《The EMBO journal》1996,15(13):3286-3295
The mitochondrial genome of Tetrahymena does not appear to encode enough tRNAs to perform mitochondrial protein synthesis. It has therefore been proposed that nuclear-encoded tRNAs are imported into the mitochondria. T.thermophila has three major glutamine tRNAs: tRNA(Gln)(UUG), tRNA(Gln)(UUA) and tRNA(Gln)(CUA). Each of these tRNAs functions in cytosolic translation. However, due to differences between the Tetrahymena nuclear and mitochondrial genetic codes, only tRNA(Gln)(UUG) has the capacity to function in mitochondrial translation as well. Here we show that approximately 10-20% of the cellular complement of tRNA(Gln)(UUG) is present in mitochondrial RNA fractions, compared with 1% or less for the other two glutamine tRNAs. Furthermore, this glutamine tRNA is encoded only by a family of nuclear genes, the sequences of several of which are presented. Finally, when marked versions of tRNA(Gln)(UUG) and tRNA(Gln)(UUA) flanked by identical sequences are expressed in the macronucleus, only the former undergoes mitochondrial import; thus sequences within tRNA(Gln)(UUG) direct import. Because tRNA(Gln)(UUG) is a constituent of mitochondrial RNA fractions and is encoded only by nuclear genes, and because ectopically expressed tRNA(Gln)(UUG) fractionates with mitochondria like its endogenous counterpart, we conclude that it is an imported tRNA in T.thermophila.  相似文献   

15.
Polyadenylation plays important roles in RNA metabolism in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Surprisingly, deregulation of polyadenylation by poly(A) polymerase I (PAP I) in Escherichia coli leads to toxicity and cell death. We show here that mature tRNAs, which are normally not substrates for PAP I in wild-type cells, are rapidly polyadenylated as PAP I levels increase, leading to dramatic reductions in the fraction of aminoacylated tRNAs, cessation of protein synthesis and cell death. The toxicity associated with PAP I is exacerbated by the absence of either RNase T and/or RNase PH, the two major 3′ → 5′ exonucleases involved in the final step of tRNA 3′-end maturation, confirming their role in the regulation of tRNA polyadenylation. Furthermore, our data demonstrate that regulation of PAP I is critical not for preventing the decay of mRNAs, but rather for maintaining normal levels of functional tRNAs and protein synthesis in E. coli, a function for polyadenylation that has not been observed previously in any organism.  相似文献   

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17.
The levels of macromolecules in Escherichia coli 15T(-) growing in broth, glucose, succinate, and acetate media were determined to compare relationships among deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), ribosomal ribonucleic acid (rRNA), transfer RNA (tRNA), and protein in cells at different growth rates. DNA and protein increased in relative amounts with decreasing growth rate; relative amounts of rRNA and tRNA decreased, tRNA making up a slightly larger proportion of RNA. For several amino acid-specific tRNAs studied, acceptor capacities per unit of DNA increased with increasing growth rate. The syntheses of tRNA and rRNA are regulated by similar, yet different, mechanisms. Chromatographic examination on columns of benzoylated diethylaminoethyl-cellulose of isoaccepting tRNAs for arginine, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, serine, and valine did not reveal differences in the isoaccepting profiles for rapidly (broth culture) and slowly growing (acetate culture) cells. Therefore, isoacceptors for individual amino acids appear to be regulated as a group. Lower efficiencies of ribosomal function in protein synthesis can be explained, in part, by a low ratio of tRNA to the number of ribosomes available and by a decreasing concentration of tRNA with decreasing growth rate. Data on the tRNAs specific for seven amino acids indicate that the decreasing concentration of tRNA is a general event rather than a severe limitation of any one tRNA or isoaccepting tRNA.  相似文献   

18.
RNAs that function in mitochondria are typically encoded by the mitochondrial DNA. However, the mitochondrial tRNAs of Trypanosoma brucei are encoded by the nuclear DNA and therefore must be imported into the mitochondrion. It is becoming evident that RNA import into mitochondria is phylogenetically widespread and is essential for cellular processes, but virtually nothing is known about the mechanism of RNA import. We have identified and characterized mitochondrial precursor tRNAs in T. brucei. The identification of mitochondrially located precursor tRNAs clearly indicates that mitochondrial tRNAs are imported as precursors. The mitochondrial precursor tRNAs hybridize to cloned nuclear tRNA genes, label with [alpha-32P]CTP using yeast tRNA nucleotidyltransferase and in isolated mitochondria via an endogenous nucleotidyltransferase-like activity, and are processed to mature tRNAs by Escherichia coli and yeast mitochondrial RNase P. We show that T. brucei mitochondrial extract contains an RNase P activity capable of processing a prokaryotic tRNA precursor as well as the T. brucei tRNA precursors. Precursors for tRNA(Asn) and tRNA(Leu) were detected on Northern blots of mitochondrial RNA, and the 5' ends of these RNAs were characterized by primer extension analysis. The structure of the precursor tRNAs and the significance of nuclear encoded precursor tRNAs within the mitochondrion are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
To determine functional subcellular loci of p53, a cellular protein associated with cellular transformation, we analyzed the nucleoplasmic, chromatin, and nuclear matrix fractions from normal mouse 3T3 cells, from methylcholanthren-transformed mouse (MethA) cells, and from various simian virus 40 (SV40)-transformed cells for the presence of p53. In 3T3 and MethA cells, p53 was present in all nuclear subfractions, suggesting an association of p53 with different structural components of the nucleus. In 3T3 cells, p53 was rapidly turned over, whereas in MethA cells, p53 was metabolically stable. In SV40-transformed cells, p53 complexed to large tumor antigen (large T) was found in the nucleoplasmic and nuclear matrix fractions, as described previously (M. Staufenbiel and W. Deppert, Cell 33:173-181, 1983). In addition, however, metabolically stable p53 not complexed to large T (free p53) was also found in the chromatin and nuclear matrix fractions of these cells. This free p53 did not arise by dissociation of large T-p53 complexes, suggesting that stabilization of p53 in SV40-transformed cells can also occur by means other than formation of a complex with large T.  相似文献   

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