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J Bacteriol. 1978 January; 133(1): 251-255
Copyright © 1978 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Effects of Detergents on Ribosomal Precursor Subunits of Bacillus megaterium

Barbara A. Body{dagger} and Bernard H. Brownstein{dagger}{dagger}

Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506

ABSTRACT

Cell extracts prepared by osmotic lysis of protoplasts were analyzed by sucrose gradient sedimentation. In the absence of detergents, ribosomal precursor particles were found in a gradient fraction which sedimented faster than mature 50S subunits and in two other fractions coincident with mature 50S and 30S ribosomal subunits. Phospholipid, an indicator of membrane, was shown to be associated with only the fastest-sedimenting ribosomal precursor particle fraction. After the extracts were treated with detergents, all phospholipid was found at the top of the gradients. Brij 58, Triton X-100, and Nonidet P-40 did not cause a change in the sedimentation values of precursors; however, the detergents deoxycholate or LOC (Amway Corp.) disrupted the fastest-sedimenting precursor and converted the ribosomal precursor subunits which sedimented at the 50S and 30S positions to five different classes of more slowly sedimenting particles. Earlier reports on the in vivo assembly of ribosomal subunits have shown that several stages of ribosomal precursor subunits exist, and, in the presence of the detergents deoxycholate and LOC, which had been used to prepare cell extracts, the precursors sedimented more slowly. Our data are consistent with the hypothesis that those detergents selectively modify the structure of ribosomal precursors and lend further support to the hypothesis that the in vivo ribosomal precursor subunits have 50S and 30S sedimentation values. In addition, these data support the idea that the ribosomal precursor particles found in the fast-sedimenting fraction may constitute a unique precursor fraction.


FOOTNOTES

{dagger} Present Address: Department of Medicine, Divison of Infectious Diseases, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110.

{dagger}{dagger} Present Address: Department of Biophysics and Theoretical Biology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637.


J Bacteriol. 1978 January; 133(1): 251-255
Copyright © 1978 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.







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Copyright © 1978 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.