Variability of bacterial gene-directed enzyme production in human genetically deficient cells
- PMID: 105984
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00291923
Variability of bacterial gene-directed enzyme production in human genetically deficient cells
Abstract
Human beta-galactosidase-deficient skin fibroblasts from a patient with generalized gangliosidosis (GMI-gangliosidosis type I) were treated with phage lambda plac DNA, coding for Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase (beta-D-galactoside galactohydrolase, EC.3.2.1.23). New beta-galactosidase activity detected in cell extracts of phage DNA-treated GMI-gangliosidosis fibroblasts continued to vary considerably from one experiment to another. It behaved like the E. coli z-gene product upon immunochemical and physicochemical investigation. In some experiments the antigenic behavior of resultant beta-galactoside activity in lambda plac DNA-treated cells resembled that of mutant E. coli beta-galactosidase. Among the factors and variables that may be responsible for the variation in the results obtained here and elsewhere, low physical binding between prokaryotic mRNA sequences and fibroblast ribosomal RNA could play a part connected with effective translation. This hypothesis is discussed under the aspect of a comparison of the ribosomal binding site of lac z mRNA with the 3'-terminus of the eukaryotic 18s ribosomal RNA, which shows limited possibilities for base-pairing interactions. More extensive possibilities for forming Watson-Crick base pairs between their initiation site and the eukaryotic ribosomal binding site exist for other prokaryotic messengers, such as those of Q beta-replicase, f 1-coat protein, or UDPG-4-epimerase.