Pokeweed antiviral protein (PAP) is known to inactivate
ribosomes by removal of a specific adenine from the sarcin/ricin
(S/R) loop of the large rRNA, thereby inhibiting translation.
We demonstrate here that in addition to the previously
identified adenine (A4324), PAP removes another adenine
(A4321) and a guanine (G4323) from the eukaryotic large
rRNA. Recent results indicate that the antiviral activity
of PAP may not be due to depurination of host ribosomes.
Using PAP mutants that do not depurinate either tobacco
or reticulocyte lysate rRNA, we show that PAP inhibits
translation of brome mosaic virus (BMV) and potato virus
X (PVX) RNAs without depurinating ribosomes. Furthermore,
translation of only capped, but not uncapped, luciferase
transcripts is inhibited by PAP, providing evidence that
PAP and PAP mutants are able to distinguish between capped
and uncapped transcripts. Translation inhibition of BMV
RNAs is overcome by treatment with PAP in the presence
of increasing concentrations of the cap analog m7GpppG,
but not GpppG or GTP, indicating that PAP recognizes the
cap structure. Incubation of BMV RNAs or the capped luciferase
transcripts with PAP results in depurination of either
RNA. In contrast, uncapped luciferase transcripts are not
depurinated after incubation with identical concentrations
of PAP. These results demonstrate for the first time that
PAP can inhibit translation by a mechanism other than ribosome
depurination, by recognizing the cap structure and specifically
depurinating the capped RNAs.