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. 1990 Apr 20;212(4):661-8.
doi: 10.1016/0022-2836(90)90228-E.

Chloramphenicol-induced translational activation of cat messenger RNA in vitro

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Chloramphenicol-induced translational activation of cat messenger RNA in vitro

T Dick et al. J Mol Biol. .

Abstract

The expression of the chloramphenicol-inducible chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene (cat) of the staphylococcal plasmid pUB112 is regulated at the post-transcriptional level. Previous in vivo analyses suggested that the antibiotic stalls ribosomes that are translating a regulatory leader peptide, and that a stalled ribosome activates the ribosome binding site of the acetyltransferase encoding sequence by opening an attenuating leader mRNA hairpin structure. To test this model, we used a Bacillus subtilis S-30 extract for an in vitro translation system and in vitro synthesized cat in RNAs. We showed that the leader portion of the cat transcript acts as a translational attenuator of cat gene expression in absence of chloramphenicol. The drug stimulates acetyltransferase synthesis by a leader mRNA-dependent activation of translation of the cat message. By using 5' end-labeled transcripts and employing the endogenous RNase activity of the S-30 extract we demonstrated that this activation is due to an antibiotic-induced stalling of a ribosome on cat leader mRNA.

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