Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, Lafayette, Indiana 47907
ABSTRACT
The control of methionyl-transfer ribonucleic acid (tRNA) synthetase (L-methionine: soluble RNA ligase [adenosine monophosphate]) was studied in methionyl-tRNA synthetase mutants of Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium. The results of activity determinations with crude extracts indicate that this enzyme of the E. coli mutant strain possessed a reduced affinity for methionine-tRNA, whereas this enzyme of the S. typhimurium mutant exhibited a decreased affinity for L-methionine. The differential rate of methionyl-tRNA synthetase formation in these two mutants was several-fold greater than that of the respective parental strains. On the other hand, the level of in vivo aminoacylation of methionine-tRNA was only about one-third that of the parent strains. These results suggest that aminoacylation of methionine-tRNA is a necessary step in repression control of methionyl-tRNA synthetase of both E. coli and S. typhimurium strains.
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