Erm methyltransferases modify bacterial 23S ribosomal
RNA at adenosine 2058 (A2058, Escherichia coli
numbering) conferring resistance to macrolide, lincosamide,
and streptogramin B (MLS) antibiotics. The motif that is
recognized by Erm methyltransferases is contained within
helix 73 of 23S rRNA and the adjacent single-stranded region
around A2058. An RNA transcript of 72 nt that displays
this motif functions as an efficient substrate for the
ErmE methyltransferase. Pools of degenerate RNAs were formed
by doping 34-nt positions that extend over and beyond the
putative Erm recognition motif within the 72-mer RNA. The
RNAs were passed through a series of rounds of methylation
with ErmE. After each round, RNAs were selected that had
partially or completely lost their ability to be methylated.
After several rounds of methylation/selection, 187 subclones
were analyzed. Forty-three of the subclones contained substitutions
at single sites, and these are confined to 12 nucleotide
positions. These nucleotides, corresponding to A2051–A2060,
C2611, and A2614 in 23S rRNA, presumably comprise the RNA
recognition motif for ErmE methyltransferase. The structure
formed by these nucleotides is highly conserved throughout
bacterial rRNAs, and is proposed to constitute the motif
that is recognized by all the Erm methyltransferases.