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A ribosomal protein is specifically recognized by saporin, a plant toxin which inhibits protein synthesis.
Authors:R Ippoliti  E Lendaro  A Bellelli  M Brunori
Affiliation:Department of Biochemical Sciences, University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy.
Abstract:Many plants express enzymes which specifically remove an adenine residue from the skeleton of the 28 S RNA in the major subunit of the eukaryotic ribosome (ribosome inactivating proteins, RIPs). The site of action of RIPs (A4324 in the rRNA from rat liver) is in a loop structure whose nucleotide sequence all around the target adenine is also conserved in those species which are completely or partially insensitive to RIPs. In this paper we identify a covalent complex between saporin (the RIP extracted from Saponaria officinalis) and ribosomal proteins from yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), by means of chemical crosslinking and immunological or avidin-biotin detection. The main complex (mol. wt. congruent to 60 kDa) is formed only with a protein from the 60 S subunit of yeast ribosomes, and is not detected with ribosomes from E. coli, a resistant species. This observation supports the hypothesis for a molecular recognition mechanism involving one or more ribosomal proteins, which could provide a 'receptor' site for the toxin and favour optimal binding of the target adenine A4324 to the active site of the RIP.
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