Cholera toxin is synthesized in precursor form on free polysomes in Vibrio cholerae 569B.

1980 
Abstract Membrane-bound and free polysomes have been isolated from Vibrio cholerae 569B. Nacent polypeptide chains were completed in a cell-free translation mixture containing Escherichia coli S-300 extracts and [3H]leucine or [35S]methionine. Cholera toxin-related polypeptides synthesized in vitro were immunologically detected after treatment with either anti-subunit A or anti-subunit B serum. Immunoreactive translation products were removed from reaction mixtures with formalinized Cowan's strain of Staphylococcus aureus, electrophoresed on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels, and visualized by fluorography. Anti-subunit A serum precipitated two major polypeptide species (molecular weights 52,000 and 45,000) from translation mixtures programed with free polysomes, whereas anti-subunit B serum precipitated only the 45,000-molecular-weight polypeptide. No cholera toxin-related polypeptides were detectable in translation mixtures programed with membrane-bound polysomes. Purified subunit A and cholera toxin competed for anti-subunit A binding sites and blocked the immunoprecipitation of the 35S-labeled 52,000- and 45,000-dalton polypeptides from in vitro translation mixtures. The data presented suggest that cholera toxin is synthesized in the cytoplasm in a precursor form on free polysomes and is secreted post-translationally.
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