mocimycin and pulvomycin

mocimycin has been researched along with pulvomycin* in 16 studies

Reviews

2 review(s) available for mocimycin and pulvomycin

ArticleYear
Elfamycins: inhibitors of elongation factor-Tu.
    Molecular microbiology, 2017, Volume: 106, Issue:1

    Elfamycins are a relatively understudied group of antibiotics that target the essential process of translation through impairment of EF-Tu function. For the most part, the utility of these compounds has been as laboratory tools for the study of EF-Tu and the ribosome, as their poor pharmacokinetic profile and solubility has prevented implementation as therapeutic agents. However, due to the slowing of the antibiotic pipeline and the rapid emergence of resistance to approved antibiotics, this group is being reconsidered. Some researchers are using screens for novel naturally produced variants, while others are making directed, systematic chemical improvements on publically disclosed compounds. As an example of the latter approach, a GE2270 A derivative, LFF571, has completed phase 2 clinical trials, thus demonstrating the potential for elfamycins to become more prominent antibiotics in the future.

    Topics: Actinomycetales; Actinomycetales Infections; Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Drug Design; Escherichia coli; Guanosine Triphosphate; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Peptides, Cyclic; Polyenes; Pyridones; Ribosomes; Thiazoles

2017
Inhibitory mechanisms of antibiotics targeting elongation factor Tu.
    Current protein & peptide science, 2002, Volume: 3, Issue:1

    Since the pioneering discovery of the inhibitory effects of kirromycin on bacterial elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) more than 25 years ago [1], a great wealth of biological data has accumulated concerning protein biosynthesis inhibitors specific for EF-Tu. With the subsequent discovery of over two dozen naturally occurring EF-Tu inhibitors belonging to four different subclasses, EF-Tu has blossomed into an appealing antimicrobial target for rational drug discovery efforts. Very recently, independent crystal structure determinations of EF-Tu in complex with two potent antibiotics, aurodox and GE2270A, have provided structural explanations for the mode of action of these two compounds, and have set the foundation for the design of inhibitors with higher bioavailability, broader spectra, and greater efficacy.

    Topics: Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Drug Resistance, Bacterial; Macromolecular Substances; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Peptides, Cyclic; Polyenes; Protein Synthesis Inhibitors; Pyridones; Thiazoles

2002

Other Studies

14 other study(ies) available for mocimycin and pulvomycin

ArticleYear
Elongation factor Tu3 (EF-Tu3) from the kirromycin producer Streptomyces ramocissimus Is resistant to three classes of EF-Tu-specific inhibitors.
    Journal of bacteriology, 2007, Volume: 189, Issue:9

    The antibiotic kirromycin inhibits prokaryotic protein synthesis by immobilizing elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) on the elongating ribosome. Streptomyces ramocissimus, the producer of kirromycin, contains three tuf genes. While tuf1 and tuf2 encode kirromycin-sensitive EF-Tu species, the function of tuf3 is unknown. Here we demonstrate that EF-Tu3, in contrast to EF-Tu1 and EF-Tu2, is resistant to three classes of EF-Tu-targeted antibiotics: kirromycin, pulvomycin, and GE2270A. A mixture of EF-Tu1 and EF-Tu3 was sensitive to kirromycin and resistant to GE2270A, in agreement with the described modes of action of these antibiotics. Transcription of tuf3 was observed during exponential growth and ceased upon entry into stationary phase and therefore did not correlate with the appearance of kirromycin in stationary phase; thus, it is unlikely that EF-Tu3 functions as a resistant alternative for EF-Tu1. EF-Tu3 from Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) was also resistant to kirromycin and GE2270A, suggesting that multiple antibiotic resistance is an intrinsic feature of EF-Tu3 species. The GE2270A-resistant character of EF-Tu3 demonstrated that this divergent elongation factor is capable of substituting for EF-Tu1 in vivo.

    Topics: Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Drug Resistance, Bacterial; Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial; Models, Molecular; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Peptides, Cyclic; Pyridones; RNA, Bacterial; RNA, Messenger; Streptomyces; Streptomyces coelicolor; Thiazoles; Transcription, Genetic

2007
Effects of the antibiotic pulvomycin on the elongation factor Tu-dependent reactions. Comparison with other antibiotics.
    Biochemistry, 2004, Dec-14, Volume: 43, Issue:49

    The antibiotic pulvomycin is an inhibitor of protein synthesis that prevents the formation of the ternary complex between elongation factor (EF-) Tu.GTP and aminoacyl-tRNA. In this report, novel aspects of its action on EF-Tu are described. Pulvomycin markedly affects the equilibrium and kinetics of the EF-Tu-nucleotide interaction, particularly of the EF-Tu.GTP complex. The binding affinity of EF-Tu for GTP is increased 1000 times, mainly as the consequence of a dramatic decrease in the dissociation rate of this complex. In contrast, the affinity for GDP is decreased 10-fold due to a marked increase in the dissociation rate of EF-Tu.GDP (25-fold) that mimics the action of EF-Ts, the GDP/GTP exchange factor of EF-Tu. The effects of pulvomycin and EF-Ts can coexist and are simply additive, supporting the conclusion that these two ligands interact with different sites of EF-Tu. This is further confirmed on native PAGE by the ability of EF-Tu to bind the EF-Ts and the antibiotic simultaneously. Pulvomycin enhances the intrinsic EF-Tu GTPase activity, like kirromycin, though to a much more modest extent. As with kirromycin, this stimulation depends on the concentration and nature of the monovalent cations, Li(+) being the most effective one, followed by Na(+), K(+), and NH(4)(+). In the presence of pulvomycin (in contrast to kirromycin), aa-tRNA and/or ribosomes do not enhance the GTPase activity of EF-Tu. The property of pulvomycin to modify selectively the conformation(s) of EF-Tu is also supported by its effect on heat- and urea-dependent denaturation, and tryptic digestion of the protein. Specific differences and similarities between the action of pulvomycin and the other EF-Tu-specific antibiotics are described and discussed.

    Topics: Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Binding Sites; Enzyme Inhibitors; Enzyme Stability; GTP Phosphohydrolases; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Hydrolysis; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Peptide Elongation Factors; Peptides, Cyclic; Protein Denaturation; Pyridones; Thiazoles; Trypsin; Urea

2004
Structure and expression of elongation factor Tu from Bacillus stearothermophilus.
    Journal of molecular biology, 1998, Oct-23, Volume: 283, Issue:2

    The tuf gene coding for elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) of Bacillus stearothermophilus was cloned and sequenced. This gene maps in the same context as the tufA gene of Escherichia coli str operon. Northern-blot analysis and primer extension experiments revealed that the transcription of the tuf gene is driven from two promoter regions. One of these is responsible for producing a 4.9-kb transcript containing all the genes of B. stearothermophilus str operon and the other, identified adjacent to the stop codon of the fus gene and designated tufp, for producing a 1.3-kb transcript of the tuf gene only. In contrast to the situation in E. coli, the ratio between the transcription products was found to be about 10:1 in favour of the tuf gene transcript. This high transcription activity from the tufp promoter might be accounted for by the presence of an extremely A+T-rich block consisting of 29 nucleotides which immediately precedes the consensus -35 region of the promoter. A very similar tuf gene transcription strategy and the same tufp promoter organization with the identical A/T block were found in Bacillus subtilis. The tuf gene specifies a protein of 395 amino acid residues with a molecular mass of 43,290 Da, including the N-terminal methionine. A computer-generated three-dimensional homology model shows that all the structural elements essential for binding guanine nucleotides and aminoacyl-tRNA are conserved. The presence of serine at position 376 and a low affinity for kirromycin determined by zone-interference gel electrophoresis (Kd approximately 8 microM) and by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under non-denaturing conditions are in agreement with the reported resistance of this EF-Tu to the antibiotic. The replacement of the highly conserved Leu211 by Met was identified as a possible cause of pulvomycin resistance.

    Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Base Sequence; DNA, Bacterial; Drug Resistance, Microbial; Geobacillus stearothermophilus; Models, Molecular; Molecular Sequence Data; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Protein Conformation; Pyridones; Sequence Alignment

1998
Elongation factor Tu1 of the antibiotic GE2270A producer Planobispora rosea has an unexpected resistance profile against EF-Tu targeted antibiotics.
    Biochemical and biophysical research communications, 1997, Jan-13, Volume: 230, Issue:2

    Sensitivity of EF-Tu1 of the GE2270A producer Planobispora rosea towards GE2270A, pulvomycin and kirromycin was determined by band-shift assays for EF-Tu1-antibiotic complex formation and by in vitro translation experiments. EF-Tu1 of P. rosea appeared to be not only totally resistant to GE2270A, but also ten times more resistant to kirromycin than EF-Tu1 of Streptomyces coelicolor. In contrast, P. rosea EF-Tu1 was found to be not resistant to pulvomycin, an antibiotic that just like GE2270A blocks EF-Tu x GTP x aminoacyl-tRNA complex formation. Previous in vivo and in vitro experiments with mixed populations of antibiotic resistant and sensitive EF-Tu species had shown that sensitivity to kirromycin and pulvomycin is dominant over resistance. In the case of GE2270A we observed, however, that sensitivity is recessive to resistance, which again points to a different action mechanism than in the case of pulvomycin. Besides the tuf1 gene encoding the regular elongation factor EF-Tu1 a gene similar to S. coelicolor tuf3 for a specialized EF-Tu was located in the P. rosea genome. The tuf1 gene was isolated and sequenced. The amino acid sequence of EF-Tul of P. rosea not only exhibits an unusual Tyr160 substitution (comparable to those described for kirromycin-resistant EF-Tus), but also shows significant changes of conserved amino acids in domain 2 that may be responsible for GE2270A resistance (the latter do not resemble those leading to pulvomycin resistance). P. rosea EF-Tu1 thus is a first example of a bacterial EF-Tu with resistance against two divergently acting antibiotics.

    Topics: Actinomycetales; Amino Acid Sequence; Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Bacterial Proteins; Cell-Free System; Cloning, Molecular; Drug Resistance, Microbial; Genes, Bacterial; Kinetics; Molecular Sequence Data; Peptide Biosynthesis; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Peptides; Peptides, Cyclic; Protein Biosynthesis; Protein Structure, Secondary; Pyridones; Recombinant Proteins; Sequence Homology, Amino Acid; Streptomyces; Thiazoles

1997
Renaturation of rhodanese by translational elongation factor (EF) Tu. Protein refolding by EF-Tu flexing.
    The Journal of biological chemistry, 1997, Dec-19, Volume: 272, Issue:51

    The translation elongation factor (EF) Tu has chaperone-like capacity to promote renaturation of denatured rhodanese. This renaturation activity is greatly increased under conditions in which the factor can oscillate between the open and closed conformations that are induced by GDP and GTP, respectively. Oscillation occurs during GTP hydrolysis and subsequent replacement of GDP by EF-Ts which is then displaced by GTP. Renaturation of rhodanese and GTP hydrolysis by EF-Tu are greatly enhanced by the guanine nucleotide exchange factor EF-Ts. However, renaturation is reduced under conditions that stabilize EF-Tu in either the open or closed conformation. Both GDP and the nonhydrolyzable analog of GTP, GMP-PCP, inhibit renaturation. Kirromycin and pulvomycin, antibiotics that specifically bind to EF-Tu and inhibit its activity in peptide elongation, also strongly inhibit EF-Tu-mediated renaturation of denatured rhodanese to levels near those observed for spontaneous, unassisted refolding. Kirromycin locks EF-Tu in the open conformation in the presence of either GTP or GDP, whereas pulvomycin locks the factor in the closed conformation. The results lead to the conclusion that flexing of EF-Tu, especially as occurs between its open and closed conformations, is a major factor in its chaperone-like refolding activity.

    Topics: Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Enzyme Reactivators; GTP Phosphohydrolase-Linked Elongation Factors; Kinetics; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Protein Binding; Protein Denaturation; Protein Folding; Pyridones; Thiosulfate Sulfurtransferase

1997
Antibiotics MDL 62,879 and kirromycin bind to distinct and independent sites of elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu).
    Biochemistry, 1996, Dec-03, Volume: 35, Issue:48

    Antibiotic MDL 62,879 inhibits bacterial protein synthesis by acting on elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu). In this study we show that the inhibition of protein synthesis by MDL 62,879 in an Escherichia coli cell-free system was fully reversed by addition of stoichiometric amounts of EF-Tu but not by large excesses of EF-Ts, ribosomes, or aa-tRNA. MDL 62,879 bound tightly to EF-Tu and formed a stable 1:1 MDL 62,879:EF-Tu (M:EF-Tu) complex. We show that binding of MDL 62,879 to EF-Tu strongly affects the interaction of EF-Tu with aa-tRNA and causes rapid dissociation of preformed EF-Tu.aa-tRNA complex, suggesting that inhibition of aa-tRNA binding is due to a conformational change in EF-Tu rather than competition for the aa-tRNA binding site. Indication of a conformational change in EF-Tu induced by MDL 62,879 is further confirmed by proteolytic cleavage experiments: MDL 62,879 binding strongly protects EF-Tu against trypsin cleavage. The observed effects of MDL 62,879 appear to be different from those of the kirromycin class of antibiotics, which also inhibit protein synthesis by binding to EF-Tu, suggesting two distinct binding sites. Indeed, the M:EF-Tu complex was able to bind stoichiometric amounts of kirromycin to form a 1:1:1 M:EF-Tu:kirromycin (M:EF-Tu:K) complex, providing direct evidence that the two antibiotics bind to independent and distinct sites on the EF-Tu molecule. The interaction of the M:EF-Tu:K complex with aa-tRNA and other co-factors suggest that the contemporary binding of the two antibiotics locks EF-Tu into an intermediate conformation in which neither antibiotic exhibits complete dominance.

    Topics: Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Binding Sites; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Models, Chemical; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Peptides; Peptides, Cyclic; Poly U; Pyridones; RNA, Transfer, Amino Acyl; Thiazoles

1996
Substitution of Arg230 and Arg233 in Escherichia coli elongation factor Tu strongly enhances its pulvomycin resistance.
    European journal of biochemistry, 1995, Feb-01, Volume: 227, Issue:3

    Pulvomycin is a strong inhibitor of protein synthesis, known to prevent the binding of aminoacyl-tRNA to elongation factor Tu.GTP (EF-Tu.GTP). Recently, three pulvomycin-resistant mutant strains have been isolated by targeted mutagenesis of the tufA gene resulting in EF-Tu substitutions at positions 230, 333 or 334. In order to analyze the functions of arginine residues located in domain II, with respect to pulvomycin resistance and the interaction with aminoacyl-tRNA, we have investigated the effect of the substitutions of the highly conserved residues Arg230 and Arg233 by site-directed mutagenesis. We have purified two mutants species, [R233S]EF-TuHis and [R230V, R233F]EF-TuHis, both with a C-terminal histidine extension to enable purification by Ni2+ affinity chromatography. In this study, we describe the in vitro characterization of these mutant proteins. The results show that the concomitant substitution of residues at positions 230 and 233, dramatically increases the pulvomycin resistance. Preliminary evidence is presented that protein synthesis is inhibited by an EF-Tu.GDP.pulvomycin complex rather than by EF-Tu.GTP.pulvomycin. Moreover, the mutant [R230V, R233F]EF-TuHis shows a stronger protection of the ester bond of aminoacyl-tRNA than wild-type EF-Tu.

    Topics: Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Base Sequence; DNA Primers; DNA, Bacterial; Drug Resistance, Microbial; Escherichia coli; Genes, Bacterial; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Kinetics; Molecular Sequence Data; Mutagenesis, Site-Directed; Peptide Biosynthesis; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Peptides; Pyridones

1995
Pulvomycin-resistant mutants of E.coli elongation factor Tu.
    The EMBO journal, 1994, Nov-01, Volume: 13, Issue:21

    This paper reports the generation of Escherichia coli mutants resistant to pulvomycin. Together with targeted mutagenesis of the tufA gene, conditions were found to overcome membrane impermeability, thereby allowing the selection of three mutants harbouring elongation factor (EF)-Tu Arg230-->Cys, Arg333-->Cys or Thr334-->Ala which confer pulvomycin resistance. These mutations are clustered in the three-domain junction interface of the crystal structure of the GTP form of Thermus thermophilus EF-Tu. This result shares similarities with kirromycin resistance; kirromycin-resistant mutations cluster in the domain 1-3 interface. Since both interface regions are involved in the EF-Tu switch mechanism, we propose that pulvomycin and kirromycin both act by specifically disturbing the allosteric changes required for the switch from EF-Tu-GTP to EF-Tu-GDP. The three-domain junction changes dramatically in the switch to EF-Tu.GDP; in EF-Tu.GDP this region forms an open hole. Structural analysis of the mutation positions in EF-Tu.GTP indicated that the two most highly resistant mutants, R230C and R333C, are part of an electrostatic network involving numerous residues. All three mutations appear to destabilize the EF-Tu.GTP conformation. Genetic and protein characterizations show that sensitivity to pulvomycin is dominant over resistance. This appears to contradict the currently accepted model of protein synthesis inhibition by pulvomycin.

    Topics: Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Binding Sites; Cell Membrane Permeability; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Drug Resistance, Microbial; Escherichia coli; Genes, Bacterial; Guanosine Triphosphate; Models, Biological; Models, Molecular; Molecular Conformation; Mutagenesis, Site-Directed; Peptide Biosynthesis; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Peptides; Protein Biosynthesis; Pyridones; RNA, Transfer, Amino Acyl; RNA, Transfer, Phe; Selection, Genetic; Structure-Activity Relationship

1994
Comparison of the Tu elongation factors from Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli: possible basis for elfamycin insensitivity.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 1991, Volume: 35, Issue:11

    In a previous study (C. C. Hall, J. D. Watkins, and N. H. Georgopapadakou, Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 33:322-325, 1989), the elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) from Staphylococcus aureus was found to be insensitive to a series of kirromycin analogs which were inhibitory to the EF-Tu from Escherichia coli. In the present study, the EF-Tu from S. aureus was partially purified and characterized. Its apparent molecular mass was approximately 41,000 Da, and the enzyme copurified with EF-Ts (molecular mass, 34,000 Da). S. aureus EF-Tu differed from its E. coli counterpart in that it bound negligible amounts of [3H]GDP, in addition to being insensitive to pulvomycin and aurodox (50% inhibitory concentrations, approximately 100 and 1,000 microM, respectively, versus 2 and 0.2 microM, respectively, for E. coli). The results are consistent with the formation of a stable EF-Tu.EF-Ts complex that affects the interaction of EF-Tu with guanine nucleotides and inhibitors.

    Topics: Adenosine Triphosphatases; Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Aurodox; Chromatography, DEAE-Cellulose; Drug Resistance, Microbial; Escherichia coli; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Molecular Weight; Peptide Biosynthesis; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Peptides; Pyridones; Staphylococcus aureus

1991
Unique antibiotic sensitivity of archaebacterial polypeptide elongation factors.
    Journal of bacteriology, 1986, Volume: 167, Issue:1

    The antibiotic sensitivity of the archaebacterial factors catalyzing the binding of aminoacyl-tRNA to ribosomes (elongation factor Tu [EF-Tu] for eubacteria and elongation factor 1 [EF1] for eucaryotes) and the translocation of peptidyl-tRNA (elongation factor G [EF-G] for eubacteria and elongation factor 2 [EF2] for eucaryotes) was investigated by using two EF-Tu and EF1 [EF-Tu(EF1)]-targeted drugs, kirromycin and pulvomycin, and the EF-G and EF2 [EF-G(EF2)]-targeted drug fusidic acid. The interaction of the inhibitors with the target factors was monitored by using polyphenylalanine-synthesizing cell-free systems. A survey of methanogenic, halophilic, and sulfur-dependent archaebacteria showed that elongation factors of organisms belonging to the methanogenic-halophilic and sulfur-dependent branches of the "third kingdom" exhibit different antibiotic sensitivity spectra. Namely, the methanobacterial-halobacterial EF-Tu(EF1)-equivalent protein was found to be sensitive to pulvomycin but insensitive to kirromycin, whereas the methanobacterial-halobacterial EF-G(EF2)-equivalent protein was found to be sensitive to fusidic acid. By contrast, sulfur-dependent thermophiles were unaffected by all three antibiotics, with two exceptions; Thermococcus celer, whose EF-Tu(EF1)-equivalent factor was blocked by pulvomycin, and Thermoproteus tenax, whose EF-G(EF2)-equivalent factor was sensitive to fusidic acid. On the whole, the results revealed a remarkable intralineage heterogeneity of elongation factors not encountered within each of the two reference (eubacterial and eucaryotic) kingdoms.

    Topics: Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Archaea; Bacteria; Euryarchaeota; Fusidic Acid; Glycosides; Halobacterium; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Peptide Elongation Factors; Pyridones; Species Specificity

1986
The antibiotics kirromycin and pulvomycin bind to different sites on the elongation factor Tu from Escherichia coli.
    European journal of biochemistry, 1982, Apr-01, Volume: 123, Issue:2

    Pulvomycin and kirromycin, two antibiotics which inhibit protein biosynthesis in Escherichia coli by complex formation with the elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu), bind to different sites on the protein. While only one molecule of kirromycin can be bound to one molecule of EF-Tu, more than one molecule of pulvomycin interacts with a molecule of EF-Tu. This has been deduced from experiments in which the aminoacyl-tRNA binding and the GTPase activity of EF-Tu were measured in the presence of varying amounts of both antibiotics. These experiments are interpreted to mean that pulvomycin but not kirromycin can replace the other antibiotic in its respective site. Our conclusions are supported by circular dichroism spectroscopy.

    Topics: Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Binding Sites; Circular Dichroism; Escherichia coli; Glycosides; GTP Phosphohydrolase-Linked Elongation Factors; Guanosine Triphosphate; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Peptide Elongation Factors; Pyridones; RNA, Transfer, Amino Acyl

1982
Archaebacterial elongation factor Tu insensitive to pulvomycin and kirromycin.
    FEBS letters, 1982, Nov-08, Volume: 148, Issue:2

    A spermine-dependent, polyphenylalanine-synthesizing cell-free system having an optimum activity at 75-85 degrees C, has been developed from the extremely thermoacidophilic archaebacterium Caldariella acidophila. The C. acidophila system is totally insensitive to the EF-Tu targeted antibiotics pulvomycin (at 40 degrees C) and kirromycin (at 47-72 degrees C) contrary to control systems derived from both mesophilic (Escherichia coli) and thermoacidophilic (Bacillus acidocaldarius) eubacteria. The archaebacterial EF-Tu-equivalent factor is also immunologically unrelated to eubacterial EF-Tu and does not cross react with antibodies against Escherichia coli EF-Tu. The pulvomycin and kirromycin reactions thus provide new phyletic markers for archaebacterial ancestry.

    Topics: Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Antibiotics, Antineoplastic; Bacillus; Bacteria; Bacterial Proteins; Escherichia coli; Glycosides; Kinetics; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Peptide Elongation Factors; Pyridones; Ribosomes; Species Specificity; Spermine

1982
Kirromycin-resistant elongation factor Tu from pulvomycin-producing wild-type of Streptoverticillium mobaraense.
    Biochemical and biophysical research communications, 1982, Volume: 107, Issue:3

    Topics: Actinomycetaceae; Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Antifungal Agents; Drug Resistance; Glycosides; Kinetics; Molecular Weight; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Peptide Elongation Factors; Protein Biosynthesis; Pyridones

1982
Kirromycin-resistant elongation factor Tu from wild-type of Lactobacillus brevis.
    FEBS letters, 1982, Sep-20, Volume: 146, Issue:2

    Properties of the elongation factor Tu from Lactobacillus brevis which is naturally insensitive to kirromycin are described. The protein is characterized by an unusual nucleotide-binding site with increased affinity for GTP and extreme heat stability. EF-Tu is sensitive to pulvomycin in the assay of polyphenylalanine synthesis. However, the failure of the protein to display pulvomycin-dependent GDP-binding and GTPase activity indicates that pulvomycin action in L. brevis differs from that in E. coli.

    Topics: Aminoglycosides; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Drug Resistance, Microbial; Glycosides; Guanosine Triphosphate; Hot Temperature; Lactobacillus; Peptide Elongation Factor Tu; Peptide Elongation Factors; Pyridones

1982