Biology, asked by DevendRana8918, 11 months ago

Protein and nucleic acid interaction in ribosomes of



e.Coli

Answers

Answered by ansistkharms
0

Within the bacterial ribosome a large number of specific protein and rRNA interactions appear to be required for assembly of the particle and its subsequent function in protein synthesis. In this communication it is shown that it is possible to isolate cyanogen bromide digestion products from ribosomal 30S protein S8 which will interact stoichiometrically with 16S rRNA. In addition to this a small binding polypeptide was generated from S8-16S rRNA complexes which were treated with proteinase K. The digestion of the complex yields a "protected" fragment of protein S8 which binds to 16S-rRNA. The isolated fragment will reassociate with 16S rRNA. It is not displaced by other 30S ribosomal proteins and blocks the binding of intact S8 to 16S rRNA. The size the possible structure of the S8 protein binding site are discussed and compared with the binding of cyanogen bromide digestion products which bind to 16S rRNA.

Answered by himanshurana8529
0

Hey Mate here is your Ans ......

Escherichia coli ribosomal protein S1 plays a central role in initiation of protein synthesis, perhaps via participation in the binding of messenger RNA to the ribosome. S1 protein has two nucleic acid binding sites with very different properties: site I binds either single-stranded DNA or RNA, while site II binds single-stranded RNA only (Draper et al., 1977). The nucleic acid binding properties of these sites have been explored using the quenching of intrinsic protein fluorescence which results from binding of oligo- and polynucleotides, and are reported in this and the accompanying paper (Draper & von Hippel, 1978).

I hope you have understood.

Please mark me as BRAINLIEST

Similar questions