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      Particle weights and protein composition of the ribosomal subunits of the extremely thermoacidophilic archaebacterium Caldariella acidophila.

      Biochemical Journal
      Archaea, analysis, Bacillus, Bacteria, Bacterial Proteins, Centrifugation, Density Gradient, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Escherichia coli, Molecular Weight, Peptides, metabolism, Ribosomal Proteins, Ribosomes, Salts

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          Abstract

          1. The ribosomal subunits of one thermoacidophilic archaebacterium (Caldariella acidophila) and of two reference eubacterial species (Bacillus acidocaldarius, Escherichia coli) were compared with respect to ribosome mass and protein composition by (i) equilibrium-density sedimentation of the particles in CsCl and (ii) gel-electrophoretic estimations of the molecular weights of the protein and the rRNA. 2. By either procedure, it is estimated that synthetically active archaebacterial 30S subunits (52% protein by wt.) are appreciably richer in protein than the corresponding eubacterial particles (31% protein by wt.) 3. The greater protein content of the archaebacterial 30S subunits is accounted for by both a larger number and a greater average molecular weight of the subunit proteins; specifically, C. acidophila 30S subunits yield 28 proteins whose combined mass is 0.6 X 10(6) Da, compared with 20 proteins totalling 0.35 X 10(6) Da mass for eubacterial 30S subunits. 4. No differences in protein number are detected among the large subunits, but C. acidophila 50S subunits exhibit a greater number-average molecular weight of their protein components than do eubacterial 50S particles. 5. Particle weights estimated by either buoyant-density data, or molecular weights of rRNA plus protein, agree to within less than 2%. By either procedure C. acidophila 30S subunits 1.15 X 10(6) Da mass) are estimated to be about 300 000 Da heavier than their eubacterial counterparts (0.87 X 10(6) Da mass); a smaller difference. 0.15 X 10(6) Da, exists between the archaebacterial and the eubacterial 50S subunits (respectively 1.8 X 10(6) and 1.65 X 10(6) Da). It is concluded that the heavier-than-eubacterial mass of the C. acidophila ribosomes resides principally in their smaller subunits.

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