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Nucleic Acids Symposium Series 2006 50(1):293-294; doi:10.1093/nass/nrl146
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© 2006 Oxford University Press

Translation initiation by using various N-acylaminoacyl tRNAs

Yuki Goto1,2, Hiroshi Ashigai1,2, Yusuke Sako1,2, Hiroshi Murakami1 and Hiroaki Suga1,2

1 Research Center of Advanced Science and Technology, The University of Tokyo, 4-6-1 Komaba, Tokyo, Japan, 2 Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Tokyo, Japan

Bioactive peptides isolated from natural sources have diverse acyl groups on the N-terminus. It is difficult to synthesize these peptides in vitro translation system because ribosomal peptide synthesis generally limits the N-terminal group to be N-formylmethionine (fMet). To overcome this restriction, we developed a novel methodology for the ribosomal synthesis of peptides having various terminal N-acyl groups with desired amino acids. In this methodology, two technologies, Flexizyme system consisting of artificial ribozymes and a reconstitute E. coli cell-free translation system (PURE system), were used. First, an amino acid carrying a desired N-acyl group was charged onto an initiation tRNA by the Flexizyme system. The addition of this N-acyl-aminoacyl-tRNA (N-acyl-aa-tRNA) to the PURE system allowed us to initiate the peptide synthesis with the designated N-acyl-amino acid. By means of this methodology, the translation was exclusively initiated by various N-terminal acyl groups as well as amino acids without contamination of N-formylmethionine.


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