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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
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The five suppressors SUP35, SUP43, SUP44, SUP45 and SUP46, each mapping at a different chromosomal locus in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, suppress a wide range of mutations, including representatives of all three types of nonsense mutations, UAA, UAG and UGA. We have demonstrated that ribosomes from the four suppressors SUP35, SUP44, SUP45 and SUP46 translate polyuridylate templates in vitro with higher errors than ribosomes from the normal stain, and that this misreading is substantially enhanced by the antibiotic paromomycin. Furthermore, ribosomal subunit mixing experiments established that the 40 S ribosomal subunit, and this subunit only, is responsible for the higher levels of misreading. Thus, the gene products of SUP35, SUP44, SUP45 and SUP46 are components of the 40 S subunit or are enzymes that modify the subunit. In addition, a protein from the 40 S subunit of the SUP35 suppressor has an altered electrophoretic mobility; this protein is distinct from the altered protein previously uncovered in the 40 S subunit of the SUP46 suppressor. In contrast to the ribosomes from the four suppressors SUP35, SUP44, SUP45 and SUP46, the ribosomes from the SUP43 suppressor do not significantly misread polyuridylate templates in vitro, suggesting that this locus may not encode a ribosomal component or that the misreading is highly specific.
J Mol Biol 1986 Mar 20
PMID:Altered 40 S ribosomal subunits in omnipotent suppressors of yeast. 352 20

Intergenic conversion is a mechanism for the concerted evolution of repeated DNA sequences. A new approach for the isolation of intergenic convertants of serine tRNA genes in the yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe is described. Contrary to a previous scheme, the intergenic conversion events studied in this case need not result in functional tRNA genes. The procedure utilizes crosses of strains that are homozygous for an active UGA suppressor tRNA gene, and the resulting progeny spores are screened for loss of suppressor activity. In this way, intergenic convertants of a tRNA gene are identified that inherit varying stretches of DNA sequence from either of two other tRNA genes. The information transferred between genes includes anticodon and intron sequences. Two of the three tRNA genes involved in these information transfers are located on different chromosomes. The results indicate that intergenic conversion is a conservative process. No infidelity is observed in the nucleotide sequence transfers. This provides further evidence for the hypothesis that intergenic conversion and allelic conversion are the result of the same molecular mechanism. The screening procedure for intergenic revertants also yields spontaneous mutations that inactivate the suppressor tRNA gene. Point mutations and insertions of A occur at various sites at low frequency. In contrast, A insertions at one specific site occur with high frequency in each of the three tRNA genes. This new type of mutation hot spot is found also in vegetative cells.
J Mol Biol 1986 Apr 05
PMID:Inactivation of nonsense suppressor transfer RNA genes in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Intergenic conversion and hot spots of mutation. 373 26

In Schizosaccharomyces pombe, a suppressor-active mutation at the anticodon site of the tRNASerUCA gene sup3 leads to opal (UGA)-specific suppression. Second-site mutations (rX) in sup3 inactivate the suppressor. The sup3-UGA, rX double mutants are genetically unstable in meiotic selfings, due to the intergenic transfer of information between sup3 and the unlinked genes sup9 and sup12 (Hofer et al. 1979; Munz and Leupold 1981; Munz et al. 1982). These three genes have considerable sequence homology over about 200 base pairs (Hottinger et al. 1982). Mutants showing a decrease or an increase of the meiotic instability at sup3 have been selected. One mutation (rec3-8) increases both the genetic instability and the frequency of intragenic recombination in sup3 by one order of magnitude. It has no effect on the stability of the nonsense alleles arg1-230 (UAA), ade6-704 and ural1-61 (UGA) or on the frequency of crossing-over between sup3 and the closely linked gene cdc8. The existence of a common genetic control over intragenic recombination and genetic instability at sup3 provides a direct way of selecting for rec mutants in homothallic haploid strains of S. pombe carrying a suppressor-inactive allele of sup3. It also supports the hypothesis that the instability of mutant alleles of this gene is due to chromosome mispairing at meiosis allowing sup3 to pair with sup9 or sup12 and then to undergo recombination by gene conversion restoring the suppressor-active allele sup3-UGA from the suppressor-inactive allele sup3-UGA, rX.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Mol Gen Genet 1985
PMID:Direct selection of mutants influencing gene conversion in the yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. 386 28

Mycoplasma capricolum was previously found to use UGA instead of UGG as its codon for tryptophan and to contain 75% A + T in its DNA. The codon change could have been due to mutational pressure to replace C + G by A + T, resulting in the replacement of UGA stop codons by UAA, change of the anticodon in tryptophan tRNA from CCA to UCA, and replacement of UGG tryptophan codons by UGA. None of these changes should have been deleterious.
J Mol Evol 1985
PMID:A change in the genetic code in Mycoplasma capricolum. 393 37

We have sequenced 11 representative mutations of the unc-54 myosin heavy chain gene of Caenorhabditis elegans that affect the synthesis, assembly or enzymatic activity of the encoded myosin heavy chain. Six of the sequenced unc-54 mutations cause premature termination of protein synthesis. Four mutations (e1092, e1115, e1213, e1328) were ochre mutations, one mutation (e903) was a frameshift, which caused premature termination at a nearby UGA terminator, and one mutation (e190) was a deletion that altered the reading frame and caused termination at an ochre codon. Two mutations (e675 and s291) were inphase deletions, which resulted in a shortened myosin rod segment. These aberrant myosins fail to assemble into normal thick filaments. The sequence alterations of the missense mutations (e1152, s74, s95) indicated amino acid residues that are critical for myosin function. The mutation e1152 causes the production of a myosin heavy chain that fails to assemble into thick filaments. It had two adjacent amino acid substitutions at the extreme amino terminus of the rod, indicating a role for subfragment-2 in thick filament assembly. Mutants homozygous for s74 or s95 are very slow-moving, although they make myosin heavy chains that assemble normally. The encoded amino acid substitutions of s95 and s74 are in the 23 X 10(3) Mr and 50 X 10(3) Mr domains of the myosin head, flanking the ATP binding site. The sequenced mutations are distributed throughout the gene in the order predicted from genetic fine-structure mapping experiments. Seven of eight point mutations isolated following ethylmethane sulphonate mutagenesis were G X C to A X T transitions. A single X-ray-induced allele proved to be a deletion of two adjacent thymidine residues. The three deletion mutations were found in a region of the myosin rod with numerous direct and inverted nucleotide sequence repeats, but their origin cannot be accounted for by homologous recombination. Instead, a comparison of the deletion junctions suggests that the deletions arose by a site-specific mechanism.
J Mol Biol 1985 Jun 25
PMID:Sequence analysis of mutations that affect the synthesis, assembly and enzymatic activity of the unc-54 myosin heavy chain of Caenorhabditis elegans. 402 Aug 69

The four Rous sarcoma virus messages gag, gag-pol, env, and src all derive from a full-length RNA precursor. All four messages contain the same 5' leader segment. Three of the messages, gag, gag-pol, and env, use an AUG present in this leader to initiate translation. The src AUG initiation codon lies 3' of the leader segment, 90 bases downstream of the gag initiation codon in the spliced src message. However, in the spliced src message a UGA termination codon lies between the gag AUG and the src AUG. All three codons are in the same reading frame. By using oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis, the UGA termination codon has been converted to CGA. Cells infected with the mutant (called 1057 CGA) were spindle shaped, distinct from the rounded shape of cells infected with the parental Rous sarcoma virus. The mutant virus initiates src translation at the gag AUG, producing a 63,000-dalton src protein. We suggest that the wild-type src message produces two polypeptides, a very small (nine-amino acid) peptide that is initiated at the gag AUG and the 60,000-dalton src protein that is initiated at the src AUG.
Mol Cell Biol 1984 Sep
PMID:Mutation of a termination codon affects src initiation. 609 36

We constructed plasmid pAtrp46 in which lacZ gene expression is regulated by the attenuator of the Escherichia coli tryptophan (trp) operon. The attenuation of trp, which occurs in the presence of an excess of tryptophan, is reflected by a decrease in the expression of the lacZ gene of pAtrp46 in a trpR- strain. Experiments with pAtrp46 further support our previous results (Engelberg-Kulka et al. 1982b) that suppression of a UGA termination codon by normal charged tRNATrp, a process called UGA readthrough, is a necessary mechanism in trp attenuation. Our experiments also suggest that plasmid pAtrp46 is useful for studies of other aspects of trp attenuation.
Mol Gen Genet 1984
PMID:Modulation of Escherichia coli tryptophan (trp) attenuation by the UGA readthrough process. 609 83

A mutant strain of Escherichia coli suppressed a frameshift and some UAG, UAA, and UGA mutants of bacteriophage T4 at 37 degrees C but not at 31 degrees C. This suppression was inhibited by the addition of thymine or thymidine to the medium used to test phage growth. Furthermore, the suppressor strain required thymine or thymidine for growth on minimal medium at 43 degrees C and if this auxotrophy was removed by reversion or recombination the strain no longer suppressed. These results suggest a link between thymidine nucleotide biosynthesis and suppression.
Mol Gen Genet 1982
PMID:Thymine inhibits suppression by an Escherichia coli nonsense and frameshift suppressor. 618 Feb 81

Using a lacI-Z fusion system, we have determined the efficiency of suppression of nonsense codons in the I gene of Escherichia coli by assaying beta-galactosidase activity. We examined the efficiency of four amber suppressors acting on 42 different amber (UAG) codons at known positions in the I gene, and the efficiency of a UAG suppressor at 14 different UGA codons. The largest effects were found with the amber suppressor supE (Su2), which displayed efficiencies that varied over a 35-fold range, and with the UGA suppressor, which displayed a 170-fold variation in efficiency. Certain UGA sites were so poorly suppressed (less than 0.2%) by the UGA suppressor that they were not originally detected as nonsense mutations. Suppression efficiency can be correlated with the sequence on the 3' side of the codon being suppressed, and in many cases with the first base on the 3' side. In general, codons followed by A or G are well suppressed, and codons followed by U or C are poorly suppressed. There are exceptions, however, since codons followed by CUG or CUC are well suppressed. Models explaining the effect of the surrounding sequence on suppression efficiency are considered in the Discussion and in the accompanying paper.
J Mol Biol 1983 Feb 15
PMID:Effects of surrounding sequence on the suppression of nonsense codons. 618 40

Effects of codon context on nonsense codon suppression may act either through release factor recognition of termination codons or aminoacyl-tRNA selection by the ribosome. The latter hypothesis has been studied by comparing misreading by Escherichia coli UGA suppressor tryptophan tRNA of UGU (cysteine) codons in two synthetic polymers, poly(U-G) and poly( U5 , G), which differ in sequence around the UGU codons. In vitro translation of these polymers in a cell-free system from E. coli yielded selection errors of 4 X 10(-3) and 1.75 X 10(-2) for UGU codons in poly(U-G) and poly( U5 , G), respectively. This difference suggests that codon context may significantly affect misincorporation of amino acids into protein.
J Mol Biol 1984 May 05
PMID:An effect of codon context on the mistranslation of UGU codons in vitro. 637 56


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