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Overview
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Puromycin is an aminonucleoside antibiotic with anti-trypanosomal and antineoplastic properties. It was isolated from Streptomyces alboniger in the 1950s. Puromycin is used in cell biology to select for mammalian cell lines that have been transformed with the pac gene and express puromycin-N-acetyl-transferase. Puromycin is a reversible inhibitor of dipeptidyl-peptidase II (serine peptidase) and cytosol alanyl aminopeptidase (metallopeptidase). Puromycin has anti-cancer properties, inducing apoptosis in breast cancer cells. Puromycin is soluble in water, ethanol, methanol, DMSO and DMF.
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Background
Puromycin is an analog of the 3’ end of a tyrosyl-tRNA, part of its structure mimics adenosine and the other part mimics tyrosine. The result is that it can block ribosomal translation both in vitro and in vivo.
Puromycin can inhibit protein import into mitochondria during in vitro reactions by interfering with the ATP-dependent step of the import process. This can be used to study the protein import apparatus and identify the ATP-binding components of the apparatus.
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- Properties
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Overview