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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2004, p . 5899-5905, Vol .
186, No . 17
The
Escherichia coli argU10(Ts) Phenotype Is Caused by a Reduction in the
Cellular Level of the argU tRNA for the Rare Codons AGA and AGG
Kensaku Sakamoto,1,2 Satoshi Ishimaru,3,
Takatsugu Kobayashi,1 James R . Walker,4 and Shigeyuki
Yokoyama1,2,5*
Department of Biophysics and Biochemistry, Graduate School of Science, The
University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo,1 RIKEN Genomic
Sciences Center, Tsurumi, Yokohama,2 Institute for Virus Research,
Kyoto University, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto,3 RIKEN Harima Institute at
SPring-8, 1-1-1 Kohto, Sayo, Hyogo, Japan,5 Section of Molecular
Genetics and Microbiology and Institute for Cellular and Molecular Biology,
University of Texas, Austin, Texas4
Received 13 February 2004/ Accepted 21 May 2004
The Escherichia coli argU10(Ts) mutation in the argU gene,
encoding the minor tRNAArg species for the rare codons AGA
and AGG, causes pleiotropic defects, including growth inhibition at
high temperatures, as well as the Pin phenotype at 30°C . In the
present study, we first showed that the codon selectivity and the
arginine-accepting activity of the argU tRNA are both
essential for complementing the temperature-sensitive growth,
indicating that this defect is caused at the level of translation . An
in vitro analysis of the effects of the argU10(Ts) mutation on
tRNA functions revealed that the affinity with elongation factor
Tu-GTP of the argU10(Ts) mutant tRNA is impaired at 30 and
43°C, and this defect is more serious at the higher temperature . The
arginine acceptance is also impaired significantly but to similar
extents at the two temperatures . An in vivo analysis of
aminoacylation levels showed that 30% of the argU10(Ts) tRNA
molecules in the mutant cells are actually deacylated at 30°C, while
most of the argU tRNA molecules in the wild-type cells are
aminoacylated . Furthermore, the cellular level of this mutant tRNA is
one-tenth that of the wild-type argU tRNA . At 43°C, the
cellular level of the argU10(Ts) tRNA is further reduced to a
trace amount, while neither the cellular abundance nor the
aminoacylation level of the wild-type argU tRNA changes . We
concluded that the phenotypic properties of the argU10(Ts)
mutant result from these reduced intracellular levels of the tRNA,
which are probably caused by the defective interactions with
elongation factor Tu and arginyl-tRNA synthetase .
In the genetic code, the 20 amino acids are each encoded by one to
six synonymous codons . In unicellular organisms, some of the
synonymous codons are preferentially used in the highly expressed
genes, while some others are rarely used in such genes (28) .
This differential use of synonymous codons roughly reflects the
abundance of the tRNA species recognizing each codon (15,
16) . For example, the arginine codons CGU and CGC,
which are used frequently in the Escherichia coli genome, are
recognized by the major tRNAArg species . On the other
hand, a minor tRNAArg species (tRNA4Arg),
encoded by the argU gene (8), recognizes the
rare arginine codons AGA and AGG (34, 44) .
The rare codon AGG is also decoded by another minor tRNAArg
with a CCU anticodon (tRNA5Arg) . The use of
rare codons is not avoided in genes expressed at low or moderate
levels, and the rare arginine codons are actually contained in
regulatory genes and genes involved in DNA replication (28,
40) .
The E . coli argU10(Ts) mutation in the argU gene inhibits DNA
replication, which stops cell growth at a high temperature (12),
and causes the Pin phenotype at a permissive temperature (2) .
The argU10(Ts) defects were suggested to be due to impaired
translation of the AGA and AGG codons in the mutant cells, for
two reasons . First, the argU10(Ts) mutation is a G-to-A transition
at the 5' end of the argU tRNA, which generates a mismatched
base pair at the terminus of the acceptor stem (2) (Fig.
1); this structural alteration may impair the tRNA
function . Second, some replication genes contain a few AGA or AGG
codons, while the old gene from bacteriophage P2, involved in
the Pin phenotype, contains eight AGA or AGG codons (10) .
A reporter gene containing AGA and AGG codons can hardly be expressed
in the argU10(Ts) mutant cells at a high temperature, and
moderate inhibition of AGA and AGG translation was observed at the
permissive temperature (2) . These different levels
of AGA and AGG translation inhibition explain the various phenotypes
caused by the argU10(Ts) mutation . On the other hand, the
molecular mechanism by which the argU10(Ts) mutation impairs
AGA and AGG translation has remained obscure .
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FIG . 1 . Secondary structure of the argU tRNA . The argU10(Ts)
mutation, a G-to-A transition at position 1, is indicated . The modified
nucleotides found in this tRNA are dihydrouridine (D), 2-thiocytidine (s2C),
5-methylaminomethyluridine (mnn5U), N6-threonine
carbamoyl adenosine (t6A), pseudouridine ( ),
and 5-methyluridine (T) (17, 33).
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In the present study, we first showed that the arginine-accepting
activity, as well as the codon selectivity, of the argU tRNA
is essential for complementation of the argU10(Ts) mutation .
Then, to examine whether this mutation impairs the translational
functions of the argU10 tRNA, we carried out in vitro assays
and analyses of the aminoacylation levels in vivo for the argU10(Ts)
mutant tRNA . We found that this mutation not only impairs the
arginylation and the binding to elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu)-GTP of
the argU tRNA in vitro but also seriously reduces the amount
of this tRNA in the mutant cells . These findings reveal the molecular
mechanism by which the argU10(Ts) mutation causes the impaired
AGA and AGG translation in the mutant cells .
Bacterial strains and gene transfer. The argU10(Ts)
strain GM10 (12) and strains YT319 [ilv dnaA17(Am)
rnhA-199(Am) thyA trpE9828(Am) tyrA(Am) thr],
YT341 [dnaA17(Am) supF6(Ts)] (26),
KN250 [supD126(Ts)] (13), KN1044 (KN250 rnhA-1::Tn3),
and KN1453 [dnaA5(Ts) rnhA-1::Tn3] (27)
have been described previously . Gene transfer was carried out by
transduction by using phage P1vir (14) .
Recombinant DNA technology, DNA sequencing, and PCR.
Standard techniques were used for isolation of plasmid or
phage DNA, restriction endonuclease digestion, ligation, and gel
electrophoresis (35) . E . coli cells were
transformed by using a Gene Pulser electroporation apparatus (Bio-Rad
Laboratories) . PCR was performed by using AmpliTaq (Takara Shuzo,
Kyoto, Japan) and a DNA PJ480 thermal cycler (Perkin-Elmer Cetus) .
Nucleotide sequencing was performed by the dideoxy chain termination
method (36) by using an AmpliTaq sequencing kit
(Takara Shuzo) .
Plasmids carrying the argU alleles and the argS gene.
Plasmid pDM1, carrying the wild-type argU gene, has been described
previously (25), while the 4.5-kb argU10(Ts)
HindIII chromosomal fragment (2) was cloned into
the vector pBR322 to generate pKC1 . Plasmid pAp102 was created by
ligating the gene encoding ß-lactamase to the 2-kb EcoRI-XbaI
fragment containing the sequence essential for autonomous replication
of ColIb-P9 (11) . The NaeI-VspI fragment of
pUC119, which includes the gene encoding the
-fragment
of lacZ together with the multiple cloning site in it, was
cloned into the EcoRI site of pAp102 to generate pCL1 . Plasmid pCL2
consists of the 0.6-kb argU+ ClaI-SphI fragment of pDM1
cloned into the AccI-SphI sites of pCL1, and similarly, pCL3 consists
of the 0.6-kbp argU10(Ts) fragment of pKC1 cloned into pCL1 .
An AvaI-HindIII fragment of
clone 12C7 from the genomic library (20), which
carries the argS gene for arginyl-tRNA synthetase, was cloned
into the SalI-HindIII sites of pUC119 to generate pUA1 . The argS
gene on the BamHI-HindIII fragment of pUA1 was ligated to the
corresponding sites of the vector pACYC184 to generate pYA1 .
Site-directed mutagenesis of the argU gene. The
synthetic oligomers RV (5'-CACACAGGAAACAGCTATGAC-3') and M3
(5'-CGACGTTGTAAAACGACGGCCAG-3') were designed as PCR primers for
amplification of a fragment cloned in the multiple cloning site of
pUC119 or pCL1 . Site-directed mutagenesis of the argU gene was
done by performing the following two successive PCR amplifications .
The first amplification was carried out with the oligomer RV and a
mutagenic oligomer as PCR primers and plasmid pCL2 as the template .
The 0.3-kb fragment obtained was purified by agarose gel
electrophoresis, and the second amplification was carried out with
this fragment and the oligomer M3 as the primers and pCL2 as the
template . Finally, the 0.6-kb fragment obtained was digested with
EcoRI and HindIII and ligated into the corresponding sites of pCL1 or
pBR322 . Base substitutions were confirmed by DNA sequencing .
Preparation of the argU tRNA, EF-Tu, and arginyl-tRNA
synthetase. The wild-type and mutant argU tRNA species were
overproduced in W3110 harboring pDM1 at 37°C and in GM10 harboring
pKC1 at 30°C, respectively . The tRNAs were extracted from the
late-log-phase cells and were fractionated by high-performance
liquid chromatography on a hydroxyapatite column (HA-1000; Tosoh) (34) .
Finally, the argU tRNAs were purified from the column
fractions by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) on a
denaturing 20% polyacrylamide gel . EF-Tu was prepared from a W3110
cell extract by chromatography on a DEAE-Sephadex A-50 (pH 7.5)
column (1) . Arginyl-tRNA synthetase was purified from
W3110 harboring pUA1 by successive chromatography steps, as
described previously (30) .
Arginylation assay. Arginylation of the wild-type or mutant
argU tRNA (1 µM) by arginyl-tRNA synthetase (4 nM) was
performed at 37°C in 18 µl of mixture A (100 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 15
mM MgCl2, 2 mM ATP, 60 µM [14C]arginine [332.1
pCi/pmol; Dupont/NEN Research Products]) . Aliquots (4 µl) were
withdrawn from the reaction mixture after 20 to 90 s of incubation
and were immediately added to 10 µl of ice-chilled 5% trichloroacetic
acid to stop the reaction . These samples were spotted onto Whatman
3MM filter disks, which were washed three times with ice-chilled
5% trichloroacetic acid and then dried to obtain radioactivity
measurements with a liquid scintillation system (LSC-700; Aloka,
Tokyo, Japan) .
Assay of formation of a complex between arginyl-tRNA and EF-Tu-GTP.
To prepare the wild-type and mutant argU tRNAs in the arginylated
state, each tRNA species (6 pmol) was arginylated at 37°C for
10 min in mixture A containing 1 µM arginyl-tRNA synthetase . After
phenol-chloroform extraction, the arginylated tRNA was precipitated
with ethanol and dissolved in 5 µl of 2 mM sodium acetate buffer (pH
4.5) . A 60-µl prereaction mixture containing 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5),
10 mM magnesium acetate, 150 mM NH4Cl, 50 mM
ß-mercaptoethanol, 60 µM GTP, 0.8 mM phosphoenolpyruvate (Sigma), 2 U
of pyruvate kinase (Sigma), and EF-Tu at the concentrations indicated
below was incubated on ice for 25 min in order to replace the GDP
molecule bound to EF-Tu by GTP . The arginylated argU tRNA (5
µl) was then added to this mixture, and preincubation was continued
for another 5 min . After the preincubation, the reaction mixture
was subjected to incubation at 30 or 43°C . The final concentration
of the arginyl argU tRNAs was 0.092 µM, while the final
concentration of EF-Tu was 0 or 0.062 µM at 30°C and 0 or 0.15 µM at
43°C . Aliquots (11.5 µl) of the reaction mixture were withdrawn at
different times and then immediately spotted onto Whatman 3MM filter
disks soaked with 5% trichloroacetic acid . The disks were washed with
ice-chilled 5% trichloroacetic acid . The radioactivities of the disks
were measured as described above for the arginylation assay . The
rate constant for deacylation (k) was calculated by using the
equation k = ln2 · t1/2–1, where t1/2
is the incubation time required for 50% of the arginyl tRNA molecules
to be deacylated .
In vivo analysis of the tRNA aminoacylation levels. Strains
YT319 and SF151 were each grown in Luria-Bertani medium (35)
containing 0.1% glucose and 50 µg of thymine per ml at 30°C . At an
optical density at 600 nm of 0.2, a portion of each culture was
shifted to 43°C . Extraction of tRNA from the cell samples was carried
out under acidic conditions, as described previously (46) .
An aliquot of each extract was used to measure the absorbance at 260
nm, and another aliquot was analyzed by PAGE in order to confirm that
the ratio between the A260 and the amount of tRNA
was constant for the tRNA preparations . This ratio would change if
each tRNA preparation contained a different level of the
contamination due to other nucleic acids . The remaining sample was
subjected to acid-urea PAGE (46) to separate the
aminoacylated and uncharged tRNAs . Transfer of tRNA from the gel to a
Hybond-N nylon membrane (Amersham) was carried out with an
electroblot apparatus (NA-1512; Nihon Eido, Tokyo, Japan), and the
argU tRNA was detected by hybridization to a 32P-labeled
oligodeoxyribonucleotide probe (5'-CGAACCTGCGGCCCACGAC-3')
complementary to residues 39 to 57 of the tRNA . The intensities of
the bands on the autoradiogram were measured with a BAS2000
bioimaging analyzer (Fuji Photo Film, Tokyo, Japan) .
An aliquot of each tRNA extract was examined for its tyrosine
acceptance as an internal control for the intracellular level of the
argU tRNA . The 40 µM tRNA extract was aminoacylated at 37°C
for 30 min with 20 µM L-[14C]tyrosine (16.9
GBq/mmol; New England Nuclear) in a 30-µl mixture containing
100 mM Tris-Cl (pH 7.6), 15 mM MgCl2, 40 mM KCl, 1 mM dithiothreitol,
4 mM ATP, and 50 nM E . coli tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase . The tyrosine
concentration used was greater than the concentration of tyrosine
tRNA species in the tRNA extract . Preparation of the tyrosyl-tRNA
synthetase has been described previously (18) . The
radioactivity of the accepted tyrosine was measured as described
above for the arginylation assay .
The temperature sensitivity of the argU10(Ts) mutant occurs
at the level of translation. The argU10(Ts) mutant strain GM10
exhibits a leaky phenotype at high temperatures (12) .
To obtain mutants with a strict phenotype, we transferred the
argU10(Ts) mutation into rnhA-defective backgrounds (Table
1), which evoke a nonstandard mode of DNA
replication initiation (19), while the argU10(Ts)
mutation inhibits DNA replication at the stage of polymerization (12) .
Strain SF151, which was obtained in this way, was used in the present
study . The temperature-sensitive growth of SF151 can be complemented
by the wild-type argU gene on a low-copy vector derived from
the ColIb-P9 plasmid, whose copy number is 1.7 copies per cell (3),
but it cannot be complemented by the argU10(Ts) gene on the
same vector (Fig . 2a to c) .
| TABLE 1 . Growth of the argU10(Ts) mutants and the parental
strains at 42°C
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FIG . 2 . Growth of SF151 transformed with the following plasmids: vector
pCL1 (a); the argU+ plasmid pCL2 (b); the argU(Ts)
plasmid pCL3 (c); the argU alleles with U20, G20, and C20 (d, e,
and f, respectively), each cloned in pCL1; vector pCL1 together with the
ArgRS-overproducing plasmid pYA1 (g); the argU alleles with U20,
G20, and C20 (h, i, and j, respectively), each together with pYA1;
vector pBR322 (k); the argU+ plasmid pDM1 (l); and
pBR322 carrying the argU gene with a CCT anticodon (m) . Colonies
transformed at 30°C were streaked on Luria-Bertani agar containing
ampicillin (20 µg/ml) and thymine (50 µg/ml) (a to f), chloramphenicol
(25 µg/ml) in addition to ampicillin (20 µg/ml) and thymine (50 µg/ml)
(g to j), and ampicillin (50 µg/ml) and thymine (50 µg/ml) (k to m) and
were then incubated for 24 h at 42°C.
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We examined whether the translational properties of the argU
tRNA is necessary for complementation of the argU10(Ts) mutant .
The argU tRNA recognizes the AGA and AGG codons (34,
44) . The TCT anticodon sequence in the argU
gene was replaced by CCT, so that it could recognize only the AGG
codon . It was previously reported that this argU tRNA (CCU)
does not complement the temperature-sensitive growth of strain GM10 (44);
a similar result was obtained with the SF151 strain (Fig.
2k to m) . This observation showed that the ability
of the argU tRNA to recognize the AGA codon is necessary for
the complementation .
Then we carried out complementation experiments using the argU
tRNA variants with low arginine-accepting activities . Since A20
in the D loop of E . coli tRNAArg is required specifically
for arginylation (23, 24), the base
substitutions in this position only impair the arginine-accepting
activity . None of the argU gene variants with C, G, and T at
position 20 complemented the temperature sensitivity of SF151 (Fig.
2d to f) . The complementing activities of these
variants were recovered when E . coli arginyl-tRNA synthetase
(ArgRS) was overproduced in SF151, while overproduction of ArgRS
alone did not complement SF151 (Fig . 2g to j) . This
observation indicates that the arginylation of the argU tRNA
is a prerequisite for the argU+ complementing activity .
These results unambiguously show that the argU10(Ts) phenotype
is caused at the level of translation . In order to examine the
possibility that any deleterious property of the mutant tRNA causes
the argU10(Ts) phenotype, we analyzed the cell growth of the
W3110 strains harboring pDM1 and pKC1, which overproduced the
wild-type and mutant argU tRNA species, respectively . These
overproducing strains exhibited similar doubling times (1.3 h), as
determined on the basis of the optimal density at 600 nm of the
culture, at 43°C . Since the overproduction of the mutant tRNA hardly
affected the cell growth of the wild-type strain, it is unlikely that
the temperature sensitivity of the argU10(Ts) mutant results
from any possible deleterious property of the tRNA .
Effects of the argU10(Ts) mutation on the translational
function of the argU tRNA. We prepared argU10(Ts) tRNA
from the mutant cells that overproduced this mutant tRNA from a
multicopy plasmid . Similarly, the wild-type argU tRNA was
prepared from wild-type cells overproducing it . The affinity of the
arginylated tRNA for EF-Tu-GTP was analyzed on the basis of
protection from deacylation by EF-Tu-GTP (22,
32, 47) . In the absence of EF-Tu-GTP, the
arginylated molecules of the argU10(Ts) tRNA were deacylated
at a rate similar to that of the arginylated molecules of the
wild-type argU tRNA at both 30 and 43°C (Fig . 3) .
The rate constants for these deacylations were 2.9
x 10–2 and 8.7
x 10–2 min–1 at 30 and
43°C, respectively .
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FIG . 3 . Deacylation of the arginylated molecules of the wild-type
argU tRNA (
and •) and the argU10(Ts) tRNA (
and
)
in the presence (
and
)
or absence (• and
)
of EF-Tu at 30°C (A) and 43°C (B) . Samples were withdrawn after
incubation for 0, 10, 20, 30, and 40 min at 30°C and after incubation
for 0, 6, 12, 20, and 30 min at 43°C . The relative amounts of
arginyl-tRNA are plotted on a log scale against the incubation time.
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The addition of EF-Tu-GTP to the reaction mixture at 30°C
significantly decreased the deacylation rate for the wild-type
argU tRNA, and the rate constant was 7.7 x
10–3 min–1 (Fig . 3A) . The deacylation
was also suppressed strongly at 43°C, and the rate constant was 8.7
x 10–3 min–1 (Fig .
3B) . For the argU10(Ts) mutant tRNA, the
protection from deacylation by EF-Tu-GTP was significantly weaker
even at 30°C (rate constant, 1.7 x
10–2 min–1) and was further impaired at 43°C
(rate constant, 3.3 x 10–2 min–1) .
Thus, the deacylation rate was increased by 13 and 94% for the
argU and argU10(Ts) tRNAs, respectively . These findings
indicate that the interaction between the argU10(Ts) tRNA and
EF-Tu-GTP are impaired at both 30 and 43°C, and the defective
interaction was more serious at the higher temperature .
On the other hand, an arginylation assay was performed with a tRNA
concentration of 1 µM, because the Km for the arginylation
of E . coli tRNAArg is 0.5 to 2.5 µM (21,
37, 45) . Furthermore, in vitro
arginylation assays showed that the arginylation rate of the
argU10(Ts) tRNA was reduced to some extent at both 30 and 43°C
compared with that of the wild-type argU tRNA (Fig .
4) . The levels of this reduction were similar at these
temperatures .
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FIG . 4 . Arginylation of the wild-type ( )
and mutant (•) argU tRNA at 30°C (A) and 43°C (B) . Samples were
withdrawn after 20, 40, 60, and 90 s of incubation.
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The argU10(Ts) mutation impaired both arginylation and complex
formation with EF-Tu-GTP at 30 and 43°C, and only the latter defect
exhibited temperature sensitivity .
argU10(Ts) mutation significantly reduces the arginylation
level and abundance of the argU10(Ts) tRNA in vivo. We then
investigated the arginylation levels of the argU10(Ts) tRNA in
the mutant cells . The wild-type and argU10(Ts) mutant strains
(YT319 and SF151, respectively) were grown at 30°C, and a portion of
each culture was shifted to 43°C . The tRNA fractions were extracted
from these strains before and 60 min after this temperature shift .
Strain YT319 continued to grow exponentially, while SF151 stopped
growing 60 to 90 min after the shift .
Figure 5 shows the arginylation levels of the argU
tRNAs in these strains before and after the temperature shift . The
amount of tRNA extract analyzed in each lane was twofold larger for
the analysis of the argU10(Ts) tRNA (Fig . 5B)
than for the analysis of the argU tRNA (Fig . 5A),
because the intracellular level of this mutant tRNA was much lower
than that of the wild-type tRNA . The level of tyrosine acceptance,
reflecting the intracellular level of tRNATyr, was
determined for the same amount of each tRNA extract as an internal
control for the cellular level of the argU tRNAs . It was found
that most of the argU tRNA molecules were charged with
arginine, and only 5% of them were deacylated in the YT319 cells at
30 and 43°C (Fig . 5A) . The total amount of this
wild-type tRNA was not affected by the temperature increase, and the
level of tyrosine acceptance was constant as well .
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FIG . 5 . argU tRNA arginylation levels in the wild-type cells (A)
and mutant cells (B) before and 60 min after the temperature upshift
(lanes 1 and 2, respectively) . The tRNA extracts analyzed in each lane
by acid-urea gel electrophoresis were 2.5- and 5-µg extracts in panels A
and B, respectively . The positions of the arginylated and uncharged
tRNAs on the gel are indicated by a and b, respectively . The argU
tRNA was detected by hybridization to a 32P-labeled specific
probe after transfer of tRNAs from the gel onto a nylon membrane . The
values below the lanes are the relative levels of tyrosine acceptance
for the tRNA extracts at the same concentration.
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On the other hand, 30% of the argU10(Ts) tRNA molecules were
uncharged in the SF151 cells at 30°C, and, in addition, the total
amount of this mutant tRNA in the charged and uncharged states was
only one-tenth the amount of the wild-type argU tRNA in YT319 .
By shifting the temperature to 43°C, the amount of the tRNA was much
more drastically reduced to a trace level (Fig . 5B) .
The levels of tyrosine acceptance were similar for YT319 and SF151 at
30°C, whereas the temperature shift reduced the level for SF151 alone
by 53% . This finding suggests that there was overall degradation of
tRNAs within 60 min after the shift, although the SF151 cells stopped
growing 60 to 90 min after the shift . Since the cellular level of the
argU10(Ts) tRNA was reduced even at 30°C and the reduction at
43°C was more drastic than the observed decrease in the level of
tyrosine acceptance, the reduced levels for the mutant tRNA did
not seem to result simply from the overall tRNA degradation, and
another explanation is required .
The argU10(Ts) mutation was isolated as a mutation that inhibits
DNA synthesis at a high temperature and was therefore originally
designated dnaY10(Ts) (12) . This mutation occurs
in the gene encoding the minor tRNAArg for the AGA and AGG
codons, the argU tRNA, and confers pleiotropic effects at the
permissive and nonpermissive temperatures, including inhibition of
translation of AGA and AGG codons (2) . Genetic
complementation experiments have shown that the ability of the
argU tRNA to recognize AGA codons is required to complement the
argU10(Ts) temperature sensitivity, suggesting that the
argU10 (Ts) phenotype is caused at the level of translation (2,
44) . The present study provided further evidence
for this claim by showing that the arginine-accepting ability of the
argU tRNA, another translational activity, is also crucial for
the complementation .
We created and used SF151, an argU10(Ts) mutant with strict
temperature sensitivity, in order to judge the complementation by the
argU tRNA variants unambiguously . Since SF151 has the dnaA
rnh double mutation, it is defective in the initiation of DNA
replication in the normal mode and probably circumvents this defect
by starting the replication from unusual sites (19) .
Since the argU10(Ts) mutation inhibits DNA replication at a
stage of polymerization, this defect in the normal mechanism
for the replication initiation appears to enhance the temperature
sensitivity of this mutant .
By using in vitro assays, the argU10(Ts) mutation was found
to reduce both the arginylation efficiency and the affinity to
EF-Tu-GTP to some extent . This mutation generates a mismatched base
pair, A1-C72, at the terminus of the acceptor stem (2) .
Base pairing at this acceptor stem terminus is important in the
binding of an aminoacyl-tRNA to EF-Tu-GTP (7,
38, 39) . In the crystal structure of the
aminoacyl-tRNA-EF-Tu-GTP ternary complex (29),
EF-Tu binds to the sugar-phosphate backbone of residue 1 of the tRNA
but not to the side of residue 72 (Fig . 6A) . Base
pairing between these residues places the aminoacylated 3' end of the
tRNA in the correct position to facilitate its accommodation by
EF-Tu-GTP . On the other hand, ArgRS interacts with the side of
residue 72 but not with the side of residue 1 in the crystal
structure of the yeast ArgRS-tRNAArg complex (4)
(Fig . 6B) . The mismatched base pair at these positions
probably destabilizes the helical structure around residue 72 that
facilitates the interaction with ArgRS . This probably also occurs
with a prokaryotic ArgRS because of its structural similarity to
yeast ArgRS (41) . Because of these contrasting
binding manners of EF-Tu-GTP and ArgRS, the stability of the acceptor
stem at its terminus seems to be more crucial for the binding of
EF-Tu-GTP, and this may explain our observation that the interaction
between the argU10(Ts) tRNA and this factor alone exhibits
temperature sensitivity .
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FIG . 6 . Interactions of the G1-C72 base pair at the acceptor stem
terminus with EF-Tu-GTP (28) (A) and yeast ArgRS (4)
(B) . EF-Tu and ArgRS are represented by blue and green ribbons,
respectively . Nucleotide residues are represented by sticks, and the
phosphate-sugar backbone is outlined by pink tubes . The amino acid
residues of EF-Tu (A) and ArgRS (B) that interact with residues 1 to 2
and 71 to 72, respectively, are also represented by balls and sticks.
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These defects in arginylation and binding to EF-Tu-GTP can explain
the uncharged fraction of the argU10(Ts) tRNA in the mutant
cells at 30°C and probably underlie the reduced intracellular levels
of this tRNA at 30 and 43°C . In the translation process, tRNA
molecules successively interact with several cellular components,
such as aminocyl-tRNA synthetase, EF-Tu-GTP, and ribosomes, and are
thus protected from degradation by RNases . The argU10(Ts) tRNA
is therefore more susceptible to RNases than its wild-type
counterpart because of its defective arginine acceptance and binding
to EF-Tu-GTP . Furthermore, this mutant tRNA is exposed to the
nucleases to a larger extent at 43°C than at 30°C because of the
further reduction in its affinity for EF-Tu-GTP at the higher
temperature .
Single base substitutions confer temperature sensitivity on the
amber suppressor tRNATyr (42, 43)
and tRNATrp (6) from E . coli .
These base substitutions, which occur in the central part of the
tRNA, destabilize the tRNA structure (5, 42)
and have thus been thought to make the mutant tRNAs more susceptible
to RNases . The efficiencies of tryptophanylation are similar
for the mutant tRNATrp and its wild-type counterpart (5) .
On the other hand, the argU10(Ts) tRNA has the mutation at an
extremity, and the exposure of this tRNA to RNases is probably due to
the defects in the arginylation and the binding to EF-Tu-GTP rather
than to destabilization of the structure .
The different in vivo levels of the argU10(Ts) tRNA at 30 and
43°C explain the different extents to which the translation of
AGA and AGG codons in the mutant cells is inhibited at these
temperatures . The argU tRNA has a UCU anticodon, where the uridine
in the first position is modified to 5-methylaminomethyluridine
(34), and thus it recognizes both the AGA and AGG codons (44) .
The AGG codon is also translated by another minor tRNAArg
species with a CCU anticodon, while this argU tRNA is the only
tRNAArg species that decodes AGA . Therefore, the inhibited
translation of the genes with AGA and AGG codons in the arg10(Ts)
mutant is probably mainly due to inhibition of AGA translation,
although it is not clear yet if the reduced argU tRNA levels
affect the efficiency of AGG codon translation .
The reduced argU10(Ts) tRNA level at 30°C explains the Pin
phenotype displayed by the argU10(Ts) mutant at this temperature .
This phenotype is exhibited by E . coli when expression of the
P2 old gene, with eight AGA or AGG codons (10),
is inhibited (9) . Interestingly, although the in
vivo amount of the argU10(Ts) tRNA in the arginylated form is
only 5% of the amount of the argU tRNA in wild-type cells, the
expression of the E . coli genes essential for cell growth
hardly seems to be impaired at this temperature .
A G1-to-A1 transition occurs in the tRNATyr and tRNAGly
mutants of E . coli and Salmonella enterica serovar
Typhimurium, respectively . The mutant tRNATyr can be
charged with glutamine (43), because a weak base
pair, including a mismatched base pair, and U35, which is also
present in tRNATyr, are recognized by glutaminyl-tRNA
synthetase (33) . The mutant tRNAGly promotes
frameshifting, and the reduced affinities for EF-Tu-GTP and/or
certain ribosomal components may underlie this phenomenon (31) .
Although the possibility of either mischarging or frameshifting was
not investigated for the argU10(Ts) tRNA, it is unlikely that
a deleterious property conferred by the argU10(Ts) mutation
causes the temperature sensitivity, because the overproduction of the
argU10(Ts) tRNA hardly affects cell growth .
In conclusion, the functional defects of the argU10(Ts) tRNA
reduce the cellular abundance of this tRNA to different extents
at various temperatures, and this is the molecular basis for the
pleiotropic effects of the argU10(Ts) mutation .
We thank Kiyoshi Mizobuchi for the gift of plasmid pAp102 and the
E . coli genomic library and Yota Murakami for providing strains
YT319 and YT341 .
This work was supported by the RIKEN Structural Genomics/Proteomics
Initiative, National Project on Protein Structural and Functional
Analyses, Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and
Technology of Japan .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Biophysics and Biochemistry, Graduate School of Science, The University of
Tokyo, 2-11-16 Yayoi, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0032, Japan . Phone: 35841 4392 . Fax:
35841 8057 . E-mail:
yokoyama@biochem.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp .
Present address: Osaka Bioscience Institute, 6-2-4 Furuedai, Suita,
Osaka 565-0874, Japan .
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