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Gene for the diphtheria toxin-susceptible elongation factor 2 fromMethanococcus vannielii
Author(s) -
Konrad Lechner,
Gabriele Heller,
A Böck
Publication year - 1988
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/16.16.7817
Subject(s) - biology , elongation factor , methanococcus , diphtheria toxin , gene , corynebacterium diphtheriae , genetics , elongation , toxin , diphtheria , microbiology and biotechnology , virology , escherichia coli , vaccination , ribosome , rna , materials science , ultimate tensile strength , metallurgy
Protein synthesis elongation factor 2 (EF-2) from all archaebacteria so far analysed, is susceptible to inactivation by diphtheria toxin, a property which it shares with EF-2 from the eukaryotic 8OS translation system. To resolve the structural basis of diphtheria toxin susceptibility, the structural gene for the EF-2 from an archaebacterium, Methanococcus vannielii, was cloned and its nucleotide sequence determined. It was found that (i) this gene is closely linked to that coding for elongation factor 1 alpha-(EF-1 alpha), (ii) the size of the gene product, as derived from the nucleotide sequence, lies between those for EF-2 from eukaryotes and eubacteria, (iii) it displays a higher sequence similarity to eukaryotic EF-2 than to eubacterial homologues, and (iv) the histidine residue which is modified to diphthamide and then ADP-ribosylated by diphtheria toxin is present in a sequence context similar to that of eukaryotic EF-2 but it is not conserved in eubacterial EF-G. The EF-2 gene from Methanococcus is expressed in transformed Saccharomyces cerevisiae but is not ADP-ribosylated by diphtheria toxin. This indicates that the Saccharomyces enzyme system is unable to post-translationally convert the respective histidine residue from the Methanococcus EF-2 into diphthamide.

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