Phenotypic suppression and misreading in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

A NUMBER of antibiotics and other inhibitors have been useful in genetic and biochemical analyses of the protein-synthesising machinery of prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms. Aminoglycoside antibiotics have been shown to be particularly helpful in this respect, especially in identifying ribosomal...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 1979-01, Vol.277 (5692), p.146-148
Hauptverfasser: Singh, A, Ursic, D, Davies, J
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Ursic, D
Davies, J
description A NUMBER of antibiotics and other inhibitors have been useful in genetic and biochemical analyses of the protein-synthesising machinery of prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms. Aminoglycoside antibiotics have been shown to be particularly helpful in this respect, especially in identifying ribosomal protein cistrons in bacteria. The aminoglycosides cause extensive misreading of the RNA code words in vitro 1 and suppress many nonsense and missense mutations in E. coli 2 phenotypically. The misreading observed in cell-free translation is believed to be the basis for the phenotypic suppression, although the exact mechanism is not known. Apart from a report of suppression of a single mutation in yeast by streptomycin 3 , there have been no demonstrations of phenotypic suppression in eukaryotic organisms. Earlier studies of mistranslation in vitro in eukaryotic systems indicated that this phenomenon is rare. Streptomycin did not cause misreading with cytoplasmic ribosomes of rat liver 4 , rabbit spleen 5 , chicken liver 6 or yeast 7 ; neomycin had no effect in rabbit reticulocyte extracts 4 and only a slight effect in the yeast and chicken liver systems 6,7 . These results suggested that translation in higher organisms functions with higher fidelity than that in bacteria. Nevertheless, aminoglycoside antibiotics have recently been shown to cause extensive translational misreading in vitro in systems derived from Tetrahymena 8 , wheat embryo 9 , and cultured human cells 10 .
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subjects Aminoglycosides - pharmacology
Anti-Bacterial Agents - pharmacology
Codon
Humanities and Social Sciences
letter
multidisciplinary
Peptide Chain Termination, Translational - drug effects
Phenotype
Protein Biosynthesis - drug effects
Ribosomes - drug effects
Saccharomyces cerevisiae - genetics
Science
yeasts
title Phenotypic suppression and misreading in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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