The methylation of 2′-hydroxyl groups is
one of the most common posttranscriptional modifications
of naturally occurring stable RNA molecules. Some tRNA
species have a 2′-O-methyl nucleoside at
the first position of the anticodon, and it was suggested
that this modification stabilizes the codon–anticodon
duplex. However, no tRNA species have been found to have
the modification at the second or third position of the
anticodon. In the present study, we measured the effects
of anticodon 2′-O-methylation on the codon-reading
efficiencies of the anticodon variants of the unmodified
forms of Escherichia coli tRNA1Ser,
using a cell-free protein synthesis assay. The modification
of C in the first position of the anticodon into
2′-O-methylcytidine increased the efficiency
of reading the G-ending codon. On the other hand, the
modifications of the second and/or third positions were
detrimental to the codon-reading activity. Thus, 2′-hydroxyl
groups at the second and third positions of the anticodon may have
some role in the translation reaction, and this may be the reason
why 2′-O-methyl nucleosides are not found in these
positions within natural tRNA species.