Abstract

Functional bacteriophage T4 deoxynucleotide kinase and α-glucosyl transferase mRNAs can be isolated from polysomes extracted from cells 8 min after infection. At least 55% of the 8-min deoxynucleotide kinase mRNA is associated with polysomes and is released from the cell membrane by deoxyribonuclease (DNase) treatment (soluble mRNA). Approximately 20% of the kinase mRNA remains tightly bound to membrane after DNase treatment (membrane mRNA) and 25% of the kinase mRNA is routinely lost during fractionation. The membrane-bound kinase mRNA is about three times as stable in vitro as the soluble kinase mRNA. Soluble kinase mRNA (14.5S) is found associated with as few as one ribosome and as many as 22 ribosomes; however, 14.5S α-glucosyl transferase mRNA is found predominantly in six ribosome polysomes. The size of the α-glucosyl transferase mRNA is heterogenous, ranging between 14.5 and 20S. The larger α-glucosyl transferase mRNAs are never found on small polysomes but appear only in polysomes containing at least nine ribosomes (18S α-glucosyl transferase mRNA). Maximum-size α-glucosyl transferase mRNA (approximately 20S) appears on polysomes containing at least 14 ribosomes. The relationships between decay of T4 mRNA and polysome size and the location of ribosome loading sites on the 20S α-glucosyl transferase message are also discussed.

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