42 research outputs found

    Translation rates of individual codons are not correlated with tRNA abundances or with frequencies of utilization in Escherichia coli.

    Full text link
    We analyzed 12 individual codons, which differed widely with respect to the frequency of use in Escherichia coli and the abundance of the corresponding tRNAs, for their influence on the coupling between transcription and translation. This was probed by determining the effects of codon substitutions in the leader peptide gene on transcription past the pyrE attenuator, as described previously by Bonekamp et al. (F. Bonekamp, H. D. Andersen, T. Christensen, and K. F. Jensen, Nucleic Acids Res. 13:4113-4123, 1985). In principle, the results revealed that either RNA polymerase or the (leading) ribosomes pass the different codon strings at different rates. However, under the assumption that the rate of transcription elongation is unaffected by the sequence changes, the results may be interpreted as indicating that different codons are translated at different rates and that these rates do not generally reflect the concentrations of the corresponding tRNAs or the frequencies with which the codons are used in E. coli. Moreover, it seems that codon synonyms that are served by the same isoaccepting tRNA species can deviate as much from each other in translational behavior as synonymous codons that are served by isoacceptors present in the cell in widely different amounts can

    Chronic pulmonary infection with Stenotrophomonas maltophilia and lung function in patients with cystic fibrosis

    Get PDF
    AbstractBackgroundThe clinical consequences of chronic Stenotrophomonas maltophilia infection in cystic fibrosis (CF) patient are still unclear.MethodAll patients treated in the Copenhagen CF centre (N=278) from 1 January 2008 to 31 December 2009 were included. Each patient chronically infected with S. maltophilia for at least 2years without any other chronic Gram-negative infection were matched to two non-infected CF controls.ResultsTwenty-one patients were chronically infected with S. maltophilia during the 2-year study period. Fifteen were infected for at least 2years.The patients in the S. maltophilia group had a steeper decline (−3.2%/year vs. −0.3%/year) in FEV1 compared to the non-infected CF controls (P=0.03). The rate of decline was the same as observed 3years before the patients became chronically infected.DiscussionsChronic infection with S. maltophilia does not lead to a steeper decline in lung function when compared to the period before chronic infection
    corecore