Several thousand mutagenized clones of Escherichia coli were screened for methyl group incorporation into protein in crude extracts, in order to isolate mutants lacking the full complement of methyl groups in ribosomal proteins. One mutant isolated by this method and designated prm-1 incorporated 6-
Genetics of ribosomal protein methylation in Escherichia coli
โ Scribed by Lhoest, Jacques ;Colson, Charles
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1977
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 493 KB
- Volume
- 154
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0026-8925
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โฆ Synopsis
The ribosomes of an Escherichia coli mutant, designated prm-2, can be methylated in vitro by an enzymatic fraction from wild-type. This enzyme is inactive on the ribosomes from another mutant, prm-1, is reported previously to be methyl group-deficient in protein L11. In vitro methylation of prm-2 ribosomes resulted in the incorporation of about one methyl group per molecule of protein L3. After acid hydrolysis, all the methyl groups were found in a very basic compound which was identified as methylamine. This compound could have been generated by acid hydrolysis of N-methylated amide-groups from glutamine or asparagine. Therefore, chemically-synthesized N4-methyl-asparagine and N5-methylglutamine were chromatographed together with an enzymatic hydrolysate of methylated prm-2 proteins. In all the chromatogrphic systems studied the methylated amino acid was found in the same position as N5'-methylglutamine. These results indicate that mutant prm-2 lacks one residue of N5-methylglutamine present in ribosomal protein L3 of wild type E. coli.
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Two genes governing ribosomal protein methylation have been located on the map of Escherichia coli by conjugation and transduction crosses between wild-type and prm (protein methylation) mutants. The Prm phenotype of recombinants was determined by an in vitro assay of methylgroups incorporation into