Abstract

Genes encoding two proteins corresponding to elongation factor G (EF-G) were cloned from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The proteins encoded by these genes are both members of the EFG I subfamily. The gene encoding one of the forms of EF-G is located in the str operon and the resulting protein is referred to as EF-G1A while the gene encoding the other form of EF-G is located in another part of the genome and the resulting protein is referred to as EF-G1B. These proteins were expressed and purified to 98% homogeneity. Sequence analysis indicated the two proteins are 90/84% similar/identical. In other organisms containing multiple forms of EF-G a lower degree of similarity is seen. When assayed in a poly(U)-directed poly-phenylalanine translation system, EF-G1B was 75-fold more active than EF-G1A. EF-G1A pre-incubate with ribosomes in the presence of the ribosome recycling factor (RRF) decreased polymerization of poly-phenylalanine upon addition of EF-G1B in poly(U)-directed translation suggesting a role for EF-G1A in uncoupling of the ribosome into its constituent subunits. Both forms of P. aeruginosa EF-G were active in ribosome dependent GTPase activity. The kinetic parameters (K M) for the interaction of EF-G1A and EF-G1B with GTP were 85 and 70 μM, respectively. However, EF-G1B exhibited a 5-fold greater turnover number (observed k cat) for the hydrolysis of GTP than EF-G1A; 0.2 s-1 vs. 0.04 s-1. These values resulted in specificity constants (k cat obs/K M) for EF-G1A and EF-G1B of 0.5 x 103 s-1 M-1 and 3.0 x 103 s-1 M-1, respectively. The antibiotic fusidic acid (FA) completely inhibited poly(U)-dependent protein synthesis containing P. aeruginosa EF-G1B, but the same protein synthesis system containing EF-G1A was not affected. Likewise, the activity of EF-G1B in ribosome dependent GTPase assays was completely inhibited by FA, while the activity of EF-G1A was not affected.

Highlights

  • elongation factor G (EF-G) is a member of the GTPase superfamily and functions in ribosome-dependent hydrolysis of GTP [1,2,3]

  • When P. aeruginosa EFG1A and EF-G1B were compared to the four homologs from these two bacteria a high level of homology was observed in which the similarity only varied from 76 to 81% (Table 2)

  • We have expressed and characterized two forms of EF-G from P. aeruginosa. Both forms of P. aeruginosa EF-G appear to be more similar to homologs from bacteria containing only one form of EF-G than to those with multiple forms

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Summary

Introduction

EF-G is a member of the GTPase superfamily and functions in ribosome-dependent hydrolysis of GTP [1,2,3]. Biochemical evidence indicated that EF-G is a multi-domain GTPase [4,5], an observation which has been confirmed by crystallographic data [6,7]. EF-G is involved in two distinct steps: elongation and ribosome recycling. EF-G binds the ribosome and promotes the movement of tRNA and mRNA relative to the ribosome [8,9]. The relative shift of the mRNA is by a distance of one codon and the peptidyl- and deacylated-tRNAs are shifted from the pre-translocational to the post-translocational sites [9,10]. EF-G acts in concert with the ribosome recycling factor (RRF) to effect the disassociation of the ribosome into its individual subunits [11,12]

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