Abstract

The molecular properties of two mutant species of the elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu), derived from either tuf A or tuf B, have been studied. One, designated EF-TuAR, is the product of a kirromycin-resistant tufA gene. The other designated EF-TuBO is a tuf B product and is present in a kirromycin-resistant mutant of Escherichia coli (LBE 2012) also harbouring the EF-TuAR species. EF-TuAR has been isolated in homogeneous form as a single gene product from the mutant strain LBE 2045, in which the tuf B gene has been inactivated by an insertion of the bacteriophage Mu. EF-TuBO has been isolated from LBE 2012 together with EF-TuAR in a 1:1 mixture. Fractionation of this mixture of DEAE-Sephadex A-50 resulted in an enrichment of EF-TuBO of about 80%. The properties of EF-TuAR and EF-TuBO have been compared to those of a kirromycin-sensitive species designated EF-TuAS, which was isolated from LBE 2045 by transduction of wild-type tuf A. We show here that all three EF-Tu species are fully competent to sustain polypeptide synthesis. All also appear to interact normally with guanine nucleotides and EF-Ts. Only in the presence of the antibiotic do the following differences appear. (a) Kirromycin causes EF-TuAS (wild-type tuf A gene product) to be retained on, and thus block, the ribosome. (b) EF-TuAR fails to bind the antibiotic and thus is capable of protein synthesis in its presence. (c) EF-TuBO fails to sustain polypeptide synthesis upon binding of kirromycin. It does not, however, block the ribosome, so the strain harbouring both this protein and EF-TuAR (LBE 2012) is kirromycin resistant.

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