LEUCINE tRNA AND CESSATION OF Escherichia coli PROTEIN SYNTHESIS UPON PHAGE T2 INFECTION*

  1. Tamiko Kano-Sueoka and
  2. Noboru Sueoka
  1. DEPARTMENT OF BIOLOGY, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
  2. PROGRAM IN BIOCHEMICAL SCIENCES, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY

Abstract

The involvement of tRNA in cellular differentiation has been tested by analyzing aminoacyl-tRNA of Escherichia coli after phage T2 infection. One or two minutes after infection, half of one of the five leucine tRNA components (Leu-tRNA1, CUG responding) undergoes a drastic structural change which leads to inactivity of both leucine acceptor activity and codon response. Whether or not the modification causes cessation of host protein synthesis without inhibiting phage-specific protein synthesis has been examined by analyzing polysome-bound leucine tRNA of E. coli before and after the phage infection. The results presented in this paper indicate that the amount of Leu-tRNA1 used after infection was greatly reduced as compared to that used in noninfected cells. Studies of the in vitro protein-synthesizing system show that T2 mRNA rarely contains the CUG codon. A mechanism by which host mRNA translation is inhibited by the phage infection is proposed from this available information.

Footnotes

  • * This work was supported by research grants from the American Cancer Society, New Jersey Division (E-398 A), the National Institutes of Health (GM-10923), and the National Science Foundation (GB-5702).

« Previous | Next Article »Table of Contents