We present a novel missense suppression system
for the selection of tRNA2Gln mutants
that can efficiently translate the CGA (arginine) codon as
glutamine. tRNA2Gln mutants were cloned
from a partially randomized synthetic gene pool using a plasmid
vector that simultaneously expresses the tRNA gene and, to ensure
efficient aminoacylation, the glutamine aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase
gene (glnS). tRNA mutants that insert glutamine at CGA
were selected as missense suppressors of a lacZ mutant
(lacZ625(CGA)) that contains CGA substituted for an essential
glutamine codon. Preliminary characterizations of four suppressors
is presented. All of them contain two anticodon mutations:
C → U at position 34 and U → C at position 35,
which allow for cognate translation of CGA. U35 was previously
shown to be an important determinant for glutaminylation of
tRNA2Gln in vitro; suppression in vivo requires
overexpression of the glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase gene (glnS).
One tRNA variant contains no further mutations and has
the highest missense suppression activity (8%). Three other
isolates each contain an additional point mutation that
alters suppression efficiency. This system will be useful
for further studies of tRNA structure and function. In
addition, because relatively efficient translation of the
rare CGA codon as glutamine is not toxic for Escherichia
coli, it may be possible to translate this sense codon
with other alternate meanings, a property which could greatly
facilitate protein engineering.