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Aminoacyl soluble-ribonucleic acid

Clark JM, Chang AY, Inhibitors of the transfer of amino acids from aminoacyl soluble ribonucleic acid to proteins, J Biol Chem, 1965, 240(12) 4734-39. [Pg.289]

The aminoacyl transfer reaction, one of the latter stages in protein synthesis, involves incorporation of amino acids from soluble ribonucleic acid-amino acid into ribosomal protein. This reaction requires guanosine triphosphate and a soluble portion of the cell. Evidence has been obtained with rat liver preparations that aminoacyl transfer is catalyzed by two protein factors, aminoacyl transferases (or polymerases) I and n, which have been resolved and partially purified from the soluble fraction. Transferase n activity has also been obtained from deoxycholate-soluble extracts of microsomes. With purified transferases I and n, incorporation is observed with relatively low levels of GTP its sulfhy-dryl requirement is met by a variety of compounds. The characteristics of this purified amino acid incorporating system, in terms of dependency on the concentration of its components, are described. [Pg.64]

Jhe synthesis of proteins, as characterized by the in vitro incorporation of amino acids into the protein component of cytoplasmic ribonu-cleoprotein, is known to require the nonparticulate portion of the cytoplasm, ATP (adenosine triphosphate) and GTP (guanosine triphosphate) (15, 23). The initial reactions involve the carboxyl activation of amino acids in the presence of amino acid-activating enzymes (aminoacyl sRNA synthetases) and ATP, to form enzyme-bound aminoacyl adenylates and the enzymatic transfer of the aminoacyl moiety from aminoacyl adenylates to soluble ribonucleic acid (sRNA) which results in the formation of specific RNA-amino acid complexes—see, for example, reviews by Hoagland (12) and Berg (1). The subsequent steps in pro-... [Pg.64]


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