Efficiency of T4 Gene 60 Translational Bypassing

Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://hdl.handle.net/10045/3377
Información del item - Informació de l'item - Item information
Título: Efficiency of T4 Gene 60 Translational Bypassing
Autor/es: Maldonado, Rafael | Herr, Alan J.
Grupo/s de investigación o GITE: Transducción de Señales en Bacterias
Centro, Departamento o Servicio: Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Fisiología, Genética y Microbiología | University of Utah. Department of Human Genetics
Palabras clave: Phage | Translation
Área/s de conocimiento: Genética | Microbiología
Fecha de publicación: abr-1998
Editor: American Society for Microbiology
Cita bibliográfica: MALDONADO CARO, Rafael Diego; HERR, Alan J. “Efficiency of T4 Gene 60 Translational Bypassing”. Journal of Bacteriology. Vol. 180, No. 7 (Apr. 1998). ISSN 0021-9193, pp. 1822-1830
Resumen: Ribosomes translating bacteriophage T4 gene 60 mRNA bypass 50 noncoding nucleotides from a takeoff site at codon 46 to a landing site just upstream of codon 47. A key signal for efficient bypassing is contained within the nascent peptide synthesized prior to takeoff. Here we show that this signal is insensitive to the addition of coding information at its N terminus. In addition, analysis of amino-terminal fusions, which allow detection of all major products synthesized from the gene 60 mRNA, show that 50% of ribosomes bypass the coding gap while the rest either terminate at a UAG stop codon immediately following codon 46 or fail to resume coding. Bypassing efficiency estimates significantly lower than 50% were obtained with enzymatic reporter systems that relied on comparing test constructs to constructs with a precise excision of the gap (gap deletion). Further analysis showed that these estimates are distorted by differences between test and gap deletion functional mRNA levels. An internal translation initiation site at Met12 of gene 60 (which eliminates part of the essential nascent peptide) also distorts these estimates. Together, these results support an efficiency estimate of ~50%, less than previously reported. This estimate suggests that bypassing efficiency is determined by the competition between reading signals and release factors and gives new insight into the kinetics of bypassing signal action.
Patrocinador/es: This work was supported by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (via Ray Gesteland) and a grant (to John Atkins) from the NIH (RO1-GM48152-05).
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10045/3377
ISSN: 0021-9193
Idioma: eng
Tipo: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Revisión científica: si
Aparece en las colecciones:INV - TSB - Artículos de Revistas

Archivos en este ítem:
Archivos en este ítem:
Archivo Descripción TamañoFormato 
ThumbnailJB98.PDF455,45 kBAdobe PDFAbrir Vista previa


Todos los documentos en RUA están protegidos por derechos de autor. Algunos derechos reservados.