Abstract
Infection of Escherichia coli by a bacteriophage T4 regA, gene 44 double mutant leads to about a 7-fold increase in the amount of RNA ligase obtained after infection by wild-type phage. Using cells infected by the double mutant, RNA ligase was purified to homogeneity with a 20% yield. Unlike previous preparations of this enzyme, the ligase is free of contaminating nuclease and is therefore suitable for intermolecular ligation of DNA substrates. In the course of these studies it was discovered that adenylalation of the enzyme--a step in the reaction pathway--markedly decreased the electrophoretic mobility of RNA ligase through polyacrylamide gels containing sodium dodecyl sulfate. This behavior allows identification of RNA ligase among a mixture of proteins and was used to demonstrate that virtually all of the purified protein is enzymatically active.
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