Abstract

In chloroplasts and a number of prokaryotes, δ-aminolevulinic acid (ALA), the universal precursor of porphyrins, is synthesized by a multistep enzymatic pathway with glutamyl-tRNA(Glu) as an intermediate. The ALA synthesizing system from barley chloroplasts is highly specific in its tRNA requirement for chloroplast tRNA(Glu); a number of other Glu-tRNAs are inactive in ALA formation although they can be glutamylated by chloroplast aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. In order to obtain more information about the structural features defining the ability of a tRNA to be recognized by the ALA synthesizing enzymes, we purified and sequenced two cytoplasmic tRNA(Glu) species from barley embryos which are inactive in ALA synthesis. By using glutamylated tRNAs as a substrate for the overall reaction, we showed that Glu-tRNA reductase is the enzyme responsible for tRNA discrimination.

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