Abstract
In all mammalian cells studied so far, amultienzyme complex containing the nine aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases specific for the amino acids Glu, Pro, Ile, Leu, Met, Gln, Lys, Arg and Asp was characterized. The complexes purified from various sources display very similar polypeptide compositions; they are composed of 11 polypeptides with molecular masses ranging from 18 to 150 kDa. By contrast, the corresponding enzymes from prokaryotes and lover eukaryotes behave as free enzymes. In order to test for the ubiquity of the multisynthetase comples in all metazoan species, we have searched for a similar complex in Drosophila. We have purified to homogeneity, from Schneider cells, a high molecular weight complex comprising the same nine synthetase activities. Its polypeptide composition resemble that of the complexes isolated from mammalian sources. By using the Western blooting procedure, some of the constituent polypeptides of the Drosophila complex were assigned to specific aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. These findings support the proposal according to which the multisynthetase complex is an idiosyncratic feature of the higher eukaryotic cells.
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