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Wiley, FEBS Letters, 3(439), p. 235-240, 1998

DOI: 10.1016/s0014-5793(98)01376-3

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C-terminal truncation of yeast SerRS is toxic forSaccharomyces cerevisiaedue to altered mechanism of substrate recognition

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This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Like all other eukaryal cytosolic seryl-tRNA synthetase (SerRS) enzymes, Saccharomyces cerevisiae SerRS contains a C-terminal extension not found in the enzymes of eubacterial and archaeal origin. Overexpression of C-terminally truncated SerRS lacking the 20-amino acid appended domain (SerRSC20) is toxic to S. cerevisiae possibly because of altered substrate recognition. Compared to wild-type SerRS the truncated enzyme displays impaired tRNA-dependent serine recognition and is less stable. This suggests that the C-terminal peptide is important for the formation or maintenance of the enzyme structure optimal for substrate binding and catalysis.