Abstract
The major species of the formylatable methionine tRNA from Mycoiplasma mycoides var capri has been purified. The 5- and 3- terminal sequences of the purified tRNA are pC-G-and C-A-A-C-C-AOH, respectively. Thus, this tRNA also contains the unique structural feature found in two other prokaryotic initiator tRNAs in that the first nucleotide at the 5-end cannot form a Watson-Crick type of base-pair to the fifth nucleotide from the 3-end. The Mycoplasma tRNA does not contain ribothymidine; however, a specific uridine residue in the sequence G-U-φ-C-G- can be enzymatically methylated by E. coli extracts to yield G-T-φ-C-G. Since ribothymidine is absent In crude tRNA from this strain of Mycoplasma, the absence of T is probably due to the lack of a U→T modifying enzyme.