Abstract

The mitochondria of the nematode Ascaris suum have tRNAs with unusual secondary structures that lack either the T-arm or D-arm found in most other organisms. Of the twenty-two tRNA species present in the mitochondria of A.suum, twenty lack the entire T-arm and two serine tRNAs lack the D-arm. To understand how such unusual tRNAs work in the nematode mitochondrial translation system, we analyzed post-transcriptional modifications of 11 mitochondrial tRNA species purified from A.suum, 10 of which lacked a T-arm and one of which lacked a D-arm. The most characteristic feature of nematode mitochondrial tRNAs lacking a T-arm was the presence of 1-methyladenosine at position 9 (m1A9). Synthesis of T-armless tRNAs with or without the modified nucleoside showed that T-armless tRNAs without the modification had much lower aminoacylation and EF-Tu-binding activities than native tRNAs. The addition of a single methyl group to A9 of these tRNAs was sufficient to restore nearly native levels of aminoacylation and EF-Tu-binding activity as well as tertiary structure, suggesting that m1A9 is a key residue for the activity of T-armless tRNAs. Thus, m1A9 is indispensable for the structure and function of T-armless tRNAs of nematode mitochondrial origin.

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