A range of antibiotic inhibitors that act within
the peptidyl transferase center of the ribosome were examined
for their capacity to perturb the relative positioning
of the 3′ end of P/P′-site-bound tRNA and the
Escherichia coli ribosome. The 3′-terminal
adenosines of deacylated tRNA and N-Ac-Phe-tRNA were derivatized
at the 2 position with an azido group and the tRNAs were
cross-linked to the ribosome on irradiation with ultraviolet
light at 365 nm. The cross-links were localized on the
rRNA within extended versions of three previously characterized
23S rRNA fragments F1′, F2′, and F4′
at nucleotides C2601/A2602, U2584/U2585 (F1′), U2506
(F2′), and A2062/C2063 (F4′). Each of these
nucleotides lies within the peptidyl transferase loop region
of the 23S rRNA. Cross-links were also formed with ribosomal
proteins L27 (strong) and L33 (weak), as shown earlier.
The antibiotics sparsomycin, chloramphenicol, the streptogramins
pristinamycin IA and IIA, gougerotin, lincomycin, and spiramycin
were tested for their capacity to alter the identities
or yields of each of the cross-links. Although no new cross-links
were detected, each of the drugs produced major changes
in cross-linking yields, mainly decreases, at one or more
rRNA sites but, with the exception of chloramphenicol,
did not affect cross-linking to the ribosomal proteins.
Moreover, the effects were closely similar for both deacylated
and N-Ac-Phe-tRNAs, indicating that the drugs selectively
perturb the 3′ terminus of the tRNA. The strongest
decreases in the rRNA cross-links were observed with pristinamycin
IIA and chloramphenicol, which correlates with their both
producing complex chemical footprints on 23S rRNA within
E. coli ribosomes. Furthermore, gougerotin and
pristinamycin IA strongly increased the yields of fragments
F2′ (U2506) and F4′ (U2062/C2063), respectively.
The results obtained with an RNAse H approach correlate
well with primer extension data implying that cross-linking
occurs primarily to the bases. Both sets of data are also
consistent with the results of earlier rRNA footprinting
experiments on antibiotic–ribosome complexes. It
is concluded that the antibiotics perturb the relative
positioning of the 3′ end of the P/P′-site-bound
tRNA and the peptidyl transferase loop region of 23S rRNA.