Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Developmental Microbiology, Department of Microbiology, University of Virginia Medical School, Charlottesville, Virginia 22901
Abstract
Two temperature-sensitive mutants (
lysS1
and
lysS2
) of the lysyl-transfer ribonucleic acid synthetase (
l
-lysine:tRNA ligase [adenosine 5′-monophosphate], EC 6.1.1.6) of
Bacillus subtilis
have been isolated. Although protein synthesis is inhibited in both mutants at the restrictive temperature (42 to 45 C), the mutants remain viable in a minimal medium. In comparison with the wild-type lysyl-tRNA synthetase, the
l
-lysine-dependent exchange of [
32
P]pyrophosphate with adenosine 5′-triphosphate (ATP) for both mutant enzymes is decreased. The
lysS1
enzyme is completely defective in the ATP-dependent attachment of
l
-lysine to tRNA, whereas the
lysS2
enzyme has 3- to 10-fold reduced levels of this activity. Temperature-resistant transformants have wild-type enzyme levels, whereas partial revertants to temperature resistance have varied levels of enzyme activity. The attachment and exchange activities of the
lysS2
enzyme are more heat labile in vitro than the wild-type enzyme, as is the attachment activity of a partial revertant of the
lysS1
mutant. The
lysS1
and the
lysS2
lysyl-tRNA synthetases have higher apparent
K
m
values for lysine and ATP, in both the activation and the attachment reactions. The
lysS2
enzyme has a
V
max
for tRNA
lys
one-third that of the wild-type enzyme. Molecular weights of ∼150,000 for the wild-type and
lysS2
enzymes and ∼76,000 for the
lysS1
enzyme were estimated from sedimentation positions in sucrose density gradients assayed by the ATP-pyrophosphate exchange activity. We propose that the two mutations (
lysS1
and
lysS2
) directly affect the sites for exchange activity, but indirectly alter attachment activity as a consequence of defective subunit association.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
14 articles.
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