The ribonucleolytic activity of the ribotoxin α-sarcin is not essential for in vitro protein biosynthesis inhibition

Fungal ribotoxins are toxic secreted ribonucleases that cleave a conserved single phosphodiester bond located at the sarcin/ricin loop of the larger rRNA. This cleavage inactivates ribosomes leading to protein biosynthesis inhibition and cell death. It has been proposed that interactions other than...

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Authors: Alvarez García, Elisa, Diago Navarro, Elizabeth, Herrero Galán, Elías, García Ortega, Lucía, López Villarejo, Juan, Olmo López, Nieves, Díaz Orejas, Ramón, Gavilanes, José G., Martínez Del Pozo, Álvaro
Format: article
Publication Date:2011
Country:España
Institution:Universidad Complutense de Madrid (UCM)
Repository:Docta Complutense
Language:Spanish
OAI Identifier:oai:docta.ucm.es:20.500.14352/41964
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/41964
Access Level:Open access
Keyword:Ribotoxin
Restrictocin
Ribosome
Protein-synthesis
Biología molecular (Química)
Bioquímica (Química)
Biotecnología
3399 Otras Especialidades Tecnológicas
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Summary:Fungal ribotoxins are toxic secreted ribonucleases that cleave a conserved single phosphodiester bond located at the sarcin/ricin loop of the larger rRNA. This cleavage inactivates ribosomes leading to protein biosynthesis inhibition and cell death. It has been proposed that interactions other than those found at the active site of ribotoxins are needed to explain their exquisite specific activity. The study presented shows the ability of a catalytically inactive α-sarcin mutant (H137Q) to bind eukaryotic ribosomes and interfere with in vitro protein biosynthesis. The results obtained are compatible with previous observations that α-sarcin can promote cell death by a mechanism that is independent of rRNA cleavage, expanding the potential set of activities performed by this family of toxins.