Author:
Kieras R M,Preston R A,Douthit H A
Abstract
Analyses of ribosomes extracted from spores of Bacillus cereus T by a dryspore disruption technique indicated that previously reported defects in ribosomes from spores may arise during the ribosome extraction process. The population of ribosomes from spores is shown to cotain a variable quantity of free 50S subunits which are unstable, giving rise to slowly sedimenting particles in low-Mg2+ sucrose gradients and showing extremely low activity in in vitro protein synthesis. The majority of the ribosomal subunits in spores, obtained by dissociation of 70S ribosomes and polysomes, are shown to be as stable as subunits from vegetative cells, though the activity of spore polysomes was lower than that of vegetative ribosomes. In spite of the instability and inactivity of a fraction of the spore's ribosomal subunits, the activity of the total population obtained from spores by the dry disruption technique was 32% of vegetative ribosome activity, fivefold higher than previously obtained with this species. The improvement in activity and the observed variability of subunit destabilization are taken as evidence for partial degradation of spore ribosomes during extraction.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
7 articles.
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