“…EMSA demonstrating the ability of NeoR to trap 80S complexes on an mRNA template+ Ribosome binding assays were performed in wheat germ extracts with 32 P-labeled mRNA (50,000 cpm/reaction) in the presence of GMP-PNP (lane 1), cycloheximide (Chx; lane 2), cycloheximide and NeoR (lane 3), and 10 mM NeoR (lane 4)+ Complexes were resolved by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis on native gels using conditions previously described (Lorsch & Herschlag, 1999)+ Following electrophoresis, the gel was dried and exposed to X-OMAT X-ray film (Kodak) at Ϫ70 8C with an intensifying screen+ The positions of migration of the 48S and 80S complexes are indicated by arrows, as is the position of the wells of the gel+ The asterisk indicates a complex whose identity is not known (possibly a 40S ϩ 80S complex) and that may correspond to the complexes present in the shoulder observed at fraction #15 of Figure 6A+ 1276 M. Carriere et al Aminoglycosides interact in complex ways with the prokaryotic ribosome+ They interfere with A-site function and some stimulate misreading of the mRNA template, resulting in the incorporation of the wrong amino acid + Neomycin and hygromycin have also been reported to block translocation (Hausner et al+, 1988) and more recently, neomycin and paromomycin have been shown to inhibit 30S ribosomal subunit assembly (Mehta & Champney, 2002)+ Given the steric bulk of AACs, as well as the presence of multiple arginine functional groups (compared to aminoglycosides), we suspect that AACs interact with a different site on the ribosome+ Our studies have not addressed the nature or location of the AAC binding site, but they could bind to either or both ribosomal subunits+ Binding to the 40S subunit could be feasible if induced structural changes altered activity of the peptidyl transferase site of the 60S subunit+ It will be interesting to test these possibilities in future experiments+ Additional properties of AACs include inhibition of Tat/ Tar interaction (Litovchick et al+, 2000), downregulation of the chemokine CXC receptor type 4 (Litovchick et al+, 2001), and inhibition of bacterial RNase P (Eubank et al+, 2002), suggesting that AACs (especially NeoR) could be considered for both HIV and bacterial chemotherapy+ In this report, we now demonstrate that AACs can inhibit eukaryotic translation+ We do not know if these activities of AACs are intimately linked or can be separated into different activities of the AACs+ Clearly, in-depth structure-activity relationship studies could help assign the different properties to functional groups+…”