Abstract

The effect of the presence or absence of methyl groups on the N6 atoms of two adjacent adenosines near the 3' end of 16 S rTNA of Escherichia coli on initiation of protein biosynthesis has been studied using wild type (methylated) and kasugamycin-resistant (unmethylated) E. coli ribosomes (see preceding paper (Poldermans, B., Goosen, N., and Van Knippenberg, P. H. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 9085--9089)). Conditions of pH, temperature, and ionic strength at which binding of fMet-tRNA to ribosomes proceeds maximally are the same for wild type and mutant ribosomes. Mg2+- and factor-dependent dissociation of ribosomes as well as the association of the subunits is also the same for methylated and unmethylated ribosomes. Binding of fMet-tRNA to wild type and to mutant 70 S ribosomes requires the same amount of the three initiation factors. However, optimal fMet-tRNA binding to unmethylated 30 S ribosomes needs more of initiation factor 3 than does binding to methylated 30 S ribosomes, provided that initiation factor 1 is absent. This difference is completely abolished when mutant 30 S ribosomes are methylated using purified methylase from the wild type strain and the methyl donor S-adenosylmethionine.

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