Amino acid incorporation directed by poly(A), poly(U) or R17 RNA has been examined in S1-depleted protein synthesizing systems. We observe that the translation of either synthetic or natural messenger RNA is strictly dependent on the presence of chain initiation factor 3 and ribosomal protein S1. With poly(A) or poly(U) both IF-3 and S1 stimulate amino acid incorporation at least 25-fold, and with R17 RNA the stimulation is approximately 15-fold. More than one copy of S1 per ribosome decreases amino acid incorporation directed by poly(U) or R17 RNA. Initiation complex formation with R17 RNA is also stimulated optimally by the addition of one copy of S1 per ribosome. The function of IF-3 and S1 in protein synthesis is considered.
We report a direct procedure to determine the proteins near the IF-3 binding site in purified 30S and 50S ribosomal subunits. This procedure introduces only limited numbers of cleavable crosslinks between IF-3 and its nearest neighbors. The cleavable crosslinking reagent, 2-iminothiolane, was used to crosslink IF-3 in place to both 30S and 50S subunits. Ribosomal proteins S9/S11, S12, L2, L5 and L17 were found, by this approach, to be in close proximity to the factor in purified IF-3-subunit complexes. In addition, IF-3 was shown to alter the ultraviolet absorbance spectrum of E. coli 70S ribosomes at 10 mM Mg2+. The magnitude of the observed difference spectrum at a constant IF-3/ribosome ratio of 1.0, is linearly dependent upon ribosome concentration over the range 5 nM - 55 nM. Titration experiments indicated that the observed effect is maximal at an IF-3/ribosome ratio of approximately 1.0. These results are taken to indicate a conformational change in the 70S ribosome induced by IF-3.
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