Degradation of abnormal proteins in peptidase-deficient mutants of Salmonella typhimurium.

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RESUMO

The degradation of abnormal proteins produced as a result of incorporation of the arginine analog L-canavanine or generated by exposure to puromycin was studied in wild-type and multiply peptidase-deficient strains of Salmonella typhimurium. Both types of abnormal protein were rapidly degraded during growth of Pep+ strains of this organism. Peptidase--deficient mutants (lacking peptidases N, A, B, and D) could also degrade these abnormal proteins, although the rate of production of trichloroacetic acid-soluble degradation products was slower in the mutant strain than in a strain carrying a normal complement of peptidases. Analysis of these trichloroacetic acid-soluble degradation products of ion-exchange chromatography showed that free amino acid was the major breakdown product produced by the wild-type strain. The acid-soluble degradation product produced by the mutant strain, however, was a complex mixture that contained a variety of small peptides as well as free amino acids. These results indicate that the same group of peptidases shown previously to function in the degradation of exogenously supplied peptides and in protein turnover during carbon starvation also lie on the pathway by which abnormal proteins are degraded.

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