
doi: 10.1007/bf00442549
pmid: 13305
Our earlier studies had shown that as fungi age, many of their vital functions decrease; in Rhizoctonia solani, protein synthesis is one of the functions so affected. We now find that the ability to methylate tRNA, a vital component of the protein synthesizing system, also decreases with age. This methylation of Escherichia coli tRNA by R. solani methylase preparations increased with the concentration of enzyme and with time of incubation; in both cases the rate of increase was considerably higher for preparations from young cells than for those from old cells. The methylation reaction also increased with the concentration of substrate tRNA, with temperature, at least to 45 degrees C, and with pH to 9.0. Methylase preparations from R. solani methylated both exogenous E. coli tRNA and yeast tRNA, but were only weakly active on isolated R. solani tRNA. However, acid-precipitated methylases from R. solani were very effective in methylating the homologous exogenous tRNA. Regardless of the source of the tRNA used as substrate, the methylases from older cells were always less active than those from young cells from the same mycelium. No methylase inhibitor was detected in the fungus.
Temperature, Methyltransferases, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Methylation, Rhizoctonia, Fungal Proteins, RNA, Bacterial, RNA, Transfer, Escherichia coli, Mitosporic Fungi
Temperature, Methyltransferases, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Methylation, Rhizoctonia, Fungal Proteins, RNA, Bacterial, RNA, Transfer, Escherichia coli, Mitosporic Fungi
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