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J Virol. 1976 January; 17(1): 94-105
Copyright © 1976 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

T7 Protein Synthesis in F-Factor-Containing Cells: Evidence for an Episomally Induced Impairment of Translation and Its Relation to an Alteration in Membrane Permeability

Daphne D. Blumberg, Cheryl T. Mabie and Michael H. Malamy

1 Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02111

ABSTRACT

T7 infection of F-factor-containing PIFA+,B+ cells is abortive. In spite of the presence of mRNA for all three classes of T7 proteins, only the earliest of the T7 proteins are synthesized. A crucial question is whether the failure of T7 to develop in PIFA+,B+ cells is the result of an inability to translate the late classes of T7 mRNA or, as has been recently suggested (Britton, and Haselkorn, 1975; Condit, 1975), whether it is the result of a more generalized alteration in membrane permeability. We have examined the effects of the wild-type PIFA+,B+ episome and two episomal mutations (pifA and pifB) on in vitro translation and membrane permeability. In vivo the episomal mutations allow partial or complete T7 development to occur. We demonstrate that cell-free protein-synthesizing systems from T7-infected PIFA+,B+ cells show a three- to fivefold decrease in the rate of translation of both natural and synthetic mRNA. In addition, ribosomes from T7-infected PIFA+,B+ cells are defective in their ability to bind Fmet tRNAf in response to natural mRNA. By contrast, cell-free extracts from T7-infected pifA (PIFA,B+) cells retain the ability to bind Fmet tRNAf and to translate natural and synthetic mRNA at normal rates. The defective T7-infected PIFA+,B+ ribosomes can be restored to full activity by a trypsin-sensitive fraction from uninfected PIFA+,B+ or T7-infected PIFA,B+ cells. Despite the differences in translational capacity of these extracts, both T7-infected PIFA+,B+ and PIFA,B+ cells display the same permeability lesions as measured by the loss of ATP from the cells into the supernatant. Mutation of the episome to pfiB prevents the loss of ATP from the cells after T7 infection.


J Virol. 1976 January; 17(1): 94-105
Copyright © 1976 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.







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