Publication | Open Access
Qsr1p, a 60S Ribosomal Subunit Protein, Is Required for Joining of 40S and 60S Subunits
116
Citations
50
References
1997
Year
Protein FunctionRibosomal Subunit JoiningNatural SciencesGeneticsProtein BiosynthesisMolecular BiologyYeastMolecular GeneticsRibosomal Subunit ProteinSubunits DevoidSystems BiologyMedicineMulti-protein AssemblyGene ExpressionStructural BiologyProtein Synthesis
QSR1 is a recently discovered, essential Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene, which encodes a 60S ribosomal subunit protein. Thirty-one unique temperature-sensitive alleles of QSR1 were generated by regional codon randomization within a conserved 20-amino-acid sequence of the QSR1-encoded protein. The temperature-sensitive mutants arrest as viable, large, unbudded cells 24 to 48 h after a shift to 37 degrees C. Polysome and ribosomal subunit analysis by velocity gradient centrifugation of lysates from temperature-sensitive qsr1 mutants and from cells in which Qsr1p was depleted by down regulation of an inducible promoter revealed the presence of half-mer polysomes and a large pool of free 60S subunits that lack Qsr1p. In vitro subunit-joining assays and analysis of a mutant conditional for the synthesis of Qsr1p demonstrate that 60S subunits devoid of Qsr1p are unable to join with 40S subunits whereas 60S subunits that contain either wild-type or mutant forms of the protein are capable of subunit joining. The defective 60S subunits result from a reduced association of mutant Qsr1p with 60S subunits. These results indicate that Qsr1p is required for ribosomal subunit joining.
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