Uridine-33 in yeast tRNA not essential for amber suppression
- 1 October 1983
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 305 (5934) , 554-556
- https://doi.org/10.1038/305554a0
Abstract
The nucleotide at position 33 on the 5' side of the anticodon of almost all tRNAs is a uridine. Crystallographic studies of different tRNAs reveal that although the precise orientation of uridine-33 is not always the same, it connects the anticodon stacked along the 3' side of the loop with the pyrimidine-32 stacked on the 5' side of the loop. The remarkably conserved nature of uridine-33 and its unique position in the anticodon loop structure has led to suggestions that this nucleotide has an essential role in the translational mechanism. We have developed a biochemical procedure to replace nucleotides 33-35 in yeast tRNATyr with any desired sequence and used it to construct amber suppressor tRNAs having different nucleotides at position 33. As all of these synthetic amber suppressor tRNAs functioned well in eukaryotic in vitro suppression assays, we conclude that uridine-33 does not have an obligatory role in the translation mechanism.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Enzymic replacement of the anticodon of yeast tRNAPheBiochemistry, 1982
- Crystal structure of yeast tRNAAspNature, 1980
- The influence of codon context on genetic code translationNature, 1980
- Three-dimensional structure of Escherichia coli initiator tRNAfMetNature, 1980
- Crystal structure of a eukaryotic initiator tRNANature, 1979
- Aminoacyl-tRNA binding at the recognition site is the first step of the elongation cycle of protein synthesis.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1977
- Structural Domains of Transfer RNA MoleculesScience, 1976
- Nonsense suppressors of Saccharomyces cerevisiae can be generated by mutation of the tyrosine tRNA anticodonNature, 1976
- Yeast suppressors of UAA and UAG nonsense codons work efficiently in vitro via tRNACell, 1976
- Atomic co-ordinates for yeast phenylalanine tRNANucleic Acids Research, 1975