CSM News Electronic Edition Volume 4, number 12 April 1, 1995 Please submit abstracts of your papers as soon as they have been accepted for publication by sending them to CSM-News@worms.cmsbio.nwu.edu. Back issues of CSM-News, the CSM Reference database and other useful information is available by anonymous ftp from worms.cmsbio.nwu.edu [165.124.233.50], via Gopher at the same address, or by World Wide Web at the URL "http://worms.cmsbio.nwu.edu/dicty.html" =========== Abstracts =========== CYTOSOLIC NUCLEOSIDE DIPHOSPHATE KINASE ASSOCIATED WITH THE TRANSLATION APPARATUS MAY PROVIDE GTP FOR PROTEIN SYNTHESIS Jurgen Sonnemann and Rupert Mutzel, Fakultat fur Biologie Universitat Konstanz, 78434 Konstanz, Germany Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., in press. Summary Elongation of nascent polypeptides in a Dictyostelium discoideum in vitro translation system did not require the addition of ATP and GTP when creatine phosphate and creatine phosphokinase were present. However, depletion of the exogenous energy supply completely abolished incorporation of amino acids. Addition of dTTP, a nucleoside triphosphate that can be utilized by nucleoside diphosphate kinase (NDP kinase) to phosphorylate endogenous ADP and GDP, partially restored protein synthesis. Dictyostelium ribosomes were found to contain NDP kinase activity that could not be released by 1 M KCl. Thermal denaturation studies, specific inhibition with antibodies, and Western blotting identify the activity as cytosolic NDP kinase. These data support the idea that GTP can be fed into the translation machinery efficiently by NDP kinase associated with active ribosomes. -------------------------------------------------------------------- [End CSM News, volume 4, number 12]