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. 1986 Dec 22;14(24):10045–10051. doi: 10.1093/nar/14.24.10045

A rapid method for determining tRNA charging levels in vivo: analysis of yeast mutants defective in the general control of amino acid biosynthesis.

D E Hill, K Struhl
PMCID: PMC341354  PMID: 3543839

Abstract

We describe a simple method to quantitate the intracellular levels of charged tRNA species representing all 20 amino acids. Small RNA species are isolated from yeast cells under conditions where amino acids remain bound to their cognate tRNAs. After chromatographic removal of free amino acids, the tRNAs are discharged, and the amounts of the released amino acids are then quantitated. This method was applied to yeast cells from a wild type strain and from three mutant strains that are defective both in the general control of amino acid biosynthesis and in protein synthesis. Two of these mutant strains, previously shown to be defective in the methionine or isoleucine tRNA synthetases, respectively contain undetectable amounts of charged methionine or isoleucine although their levels of the remaining 19 amino acids are similar to a wild type strain. In contrast, a gcd1 mutant strain has normal levels of all 20 amino-acyl tRNA species. Thus, gcd1 strains are defective in general control of amino acid biosynthesis for reasons other than artifactual starvation of an amino acid due to a failure in tRNA changing.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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