Abstrakt: |
At maximum inhibition chloramphenicol reduced [35S] methionine incorporation into acid-insoluble materials of sterile protoplasts from young tobacco leaves 5-7 cm in length by 30% compared to 70% by cycloheximide, indicating that 30% of the [35S] methionine became incorporated into chloroplast proteins and 70% into cytoplasmic proteins. [35S] Methionine became incorporated into both the large and small subunits of Fraction I protein, the major soluble protein of chloroplasts. Rifampicin and streptolydigin inhibited [3H] uridine incorporation into the 23 and 16 S rRNAs of chloroplasts to a much greater extent than into the 25 and 18 S cytoplasmic rRNAs. Rifampicin inhibited [35S] metionine incorporation into Fraction I protein after the third hour of incubation; streptolydigin after 2 h, the former evidently preventing initiation of mRNA for the large subunit of Fraction I protein and the latter its elongation. About 2.5 h was required between initiation of the large subunit mRNA synthesis, and appearance of the protein. It was estimated that 45 min is required for transcription of the mRNA which has a half-life of 2 h and that 105 min is required for its translation into approximately 350 amino acids constituting the large subunit monomeric polypeptide. The effect of chloramphenicol, cycloheximide and 2-(4-methyl-2,6-dinitroanaline)-N-methyl propionamide, the latter an inhibitor of protein initiation by 80 S ribosomes, on kinetics of Fraction I protein synthesis indicate that protoplasts contain a pool of small subunit polypeptides and that 30 min is required to polymerize the approximately 100 amino acids constituting the primary structure. |