Characterization of two beta-tubulin genes from Geotrichum candidum. |
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Authors: | Scott E. Gold William L. Casale Noel T. Keen |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Plant Pathology, University of California, 92521 Riverside, CA, USA;(2) Present address: Biotechnology Laboratory, University Boulevard, University of British Columbia, Room 237-Wesbrook Building 6174, V6T 1W5 Vancouver, B.C., Canada |
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Abstract: | Summary The -tubulin genes G1 and G2 from the phytopathogenic hemiascomycete Geotrichum candidum were found to be highly diverged in amino acid sequence from those of other filamentous fungi. G1 and G2 were also divergent from each other, with the coding regions sharing only 66% nucleotide sequence homology and 64% amino acid identity. However, the proteins shared 82% similarity and only 25 of the 161 non-identical amino acid substitutions were non-conservative. The organization of G1 is similar to other fungal -tubulin genes, but G2 has several unusual features; it has 2 amino acid additions in the N-terminal 40 residues and must employ an uncommon 5 splice junction sequence in preference to an overlapping perfect consensus. The amino acid change found to confer benomyl resistance in Neurospora crassa was also present in G2. G1 has four introns which are located similarly to those of -tubulin genes in other fungi. G2, however, has a single intron in a unique location. Translational fusions employing the 5 non-coding regions of the two Geotrichum -tubulin genes were made with the hygromycin phosphotransferase gene and shown to function in Schizosaccharomyces pombe and Trichoderma hamatum. However, G. candidum could not be transformed with these or other tested plasmids commonly used for fungal transformation. |
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Keywords: | Geotrichum candidum Galactomyces citriaurantii /content/k213qk1h5117tu76/xxlarge946.gif" alt=" beta" align=" MIDDLE" BORDER=" 0" >-tubulin Introns Fungal promoters |
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