Initiation of Picornavirus Protein Synthesis in Ascites Cell Extracts
Abstract
The current model of picornavirus protein formation implies that initiation of protein synthesis occurs at a single site on the viral RNA, and that the large polypeptide formed is later cleaved. A direct test of this model was made in vitro by studying the incorporation of [35S]methionine from rabbit liver Met-tRNAM Met and fMet-tRNAF Met into encephalomyocarditis virus RNA-coded proteins in extracts of Ehrlich ascites cells. The incorporation of N-formylmethionine was complete within 5 min, while utilization of Met-tRNAM Met continued for 20 min. Tryptic digests of [35S]methionine-labeled products from Met-tRNAM Met analyzed by anion-exchange chromatography yielded more than 30 peptides, as compared to about 15 [35S]methionine-labeled peptides from purified encephalomyocarditis virus. In contrast, products labeled with fMet-tRNAF Met yielded one major 26S-labeled tryptic peptide. The N-terminal location of methionine in this peptide was verified by Edman degradation. One predominant N-terminal tryptic peptide was also obtained with fMet-tRNAF Met when mouse Elberfeld and mengo-virus RNAs were used as messengers. On the basis of N-terminal compared with internal labeling of the products, no evidence for in vitro post-translational cleavage was found. The results are consistent with a single initiation site for synthesis of picornavirus proteins.
Footnotes
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↵ * Present address: Department of Microbiology, The Wallenberg Laboratory, Uppsala, Sweden.





