102 research outputs found

    A study of a mutant elongation factor properties of E. coli HAK88 and its mutant elongation factor Tu

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    The E. coli chromosome contains two genes for elongation factor Tu, tufA (near the fusidic acid resistance marker) and tufB (near the rifampicin resistance marker). It has been discovered that the mutant E. coli K12 strain HAK88 bears a mutation in the tufB gene, which leads to the synthesis of a protein of increased acidity. To determine whether the mutation has altered the protein's function in peptide chain elongation, we have compared the reactivities of normal tufA EF-Tu and mutant tufB EF-Tu (purified together from HAK88) with the components of the AA-tRNA binding cycle. Normal tufA EF-Tu and mutant tufB EF-Tu are indistinguishable in their affinities for GDP, EF-Ts, and phe-tRNA, and differ only slightly in their affinities for ribosomes. Coupled with the results of a separate study showing the similarity of the normal tufA and tufB gene products, these experiments demonstrate that the mutation has not altered the function of tufB EF-Tu in peptide chain elongation. Contrary to the original report (Kuwano et al., 1974; J. Mol. Biol. 86 , 689–698) the HAK88 strains we have examined no longer possess a temperature-sensitive EF-Ts. The growth rates of HAK88 strains resemble the parent HAK8 strain in their lack of tRNA dependence but unlike HAK8 show varying degrees of temperature sensitivity. We conclude that HAK88 contains a physically altered but functionally intact tufB EF-Tu. The mutation in tufB should be valuable for studying in vivo the control of expression of the genes for EF-Tu.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/47543/1/438_2004_Article_BF00401747.pd

    Fate of donor insertion sequence IS1 during transposition.

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