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5' tRNA editing has been demonstrated to occur in the mitochondria of the distantly related rhizopod amoeba Acanthamoeba castellanii and the chytridiomycete fungus Spizellomyces punctatus. In these organisms, canonical tRNA structures are restored by removing mismatched nucleotides at the first three 5' positions and replacing them with nucleotides capable of forming Watson-Crick base pairs with their 3' counterparts. This form of editing seems likely to occur in members of Amoebozoa other than A. castellanii, as well as in members of Heterolobosea. Evidence for 5' tRNA editing has not been found to date, however, in any other fungus including the deeply branching chytridiomycete Allomyces macrogynus. We predicted that a similar form of tRNA editing would occur in members of the chytridiomycete order Monoblepharidales based on the analysis of complete mitochondrial tRNA complements. This prediction was confirmed by analysis of tRNA sequences using a tRNA circularization/RT-PCR-based approach. The presence of partially and completely unedited tRNAs in members of the Monoblepharidales suggests the involvement of a 5'-to-3' exonuclease rather than an endonuclease in removing the three 5' nucleotides from a tRNA substrate. Surprisingly, analysis of the mtDNA of the chytridiomycete Rhizophydium brooksianum, which branches as a sister group to S. punctatus in molecular phylogenies, did not suggest the presence of editing. This prediction was also confirmed experimentally. The absence of tRNA editing in R. brooksianum raises the possibility that 5' tRNA editing may have evolved twice independently within Chytridiomycota, once in the lineage leading to S. punctatus and once in the lineage leading to the Monoblepharidales.  相似文献   

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We have sequenced the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) of Hyaloraphidium curvatum, an organism previously classified as a colorless green alga but now recognized as a lower fungus based on molecular data. The 29.97-kbp mitochondrial chromosome is maintained as a monomeric, linear molecule with identical, inverted repeats (1.43 kbp) at both ends, a rare genome architecture in mitochondria. The genome encodes only 14 known mitochondrial proteins, 7 tRNAs, the large subunit rRNA and small subunit rRNA (SSU rRNA), and 3 ORFs. The SSU rRNA is encoded in two gene pieces that are located 8 kbp apart on the mtDNA. Scrambled and fragmented mitochondrial rRNAs are well known from green algae and alveolate protists but are unprecedented in fungi. Protein genes code for apocytochrome b; cytochrome oxidase 1, 2, and 3, NADH dehydrogenase 1, 2, 3, 4, 4L, 5, and 6, and ATP synthase 6, 8, and 9 subunits, and several of these genes are organized in operon-like clusters. The set of seven mitochondrially encoded tRNAs is insufficient to recognize all codons that occur in the mitochondrial protein genes. When taking into account the pronounced codon bias, at least 16 nuclear-encoded tRNAs are assumed to be imported into the mitochondria. Three of the seven predicted mitochondria-encoded tRNA sequences carry mispairings in the first three positions of the acceptor stem. This strongly suggests that these tRNAs are edited by a mechanism similar to the one seen in the fungus Spizellomyces punctatus and the rhizopod amoeba Acanthamoeba castellanii. Our phylogenetic analysis confirms with overwhelming support that H. curvatum is a member of the chytridiomycete fungi, specifically related to the Monoblepharidales.  相似文献   

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Evolution of the WANCY region in amniote mitochondrial DNA   总被引:7,自引:1,他引:6  
In most vertebrate mitochondrial genomes, the site for initiation of light-strand replication, OL, is found within a cluster of five transfer RNA (tRNA) genes (tRNA(Trp), tRNA(Ala), tRNA(Asn), tRNA(Cys), and tRNA(Tyr)). This region and part of the adjacent cytochrome c oxydase subunit I (COI) gene were sequenced for two crocodilian, two turtle, and one snake species and for Sphenodon punctatus; part of the adjacent nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide dehydrogenase subunit 2 (ND2) gene was also sequenced for the crocodilian and turtle species. All had the typical vertebrate gene order. The turtles and the snake have a lengthy noncoding sequence between the tRNA(Asn) and tRNA(Cys) genes that we assumed to be homologous to the mammalian OL. The crocodilians and Sphenodon lack such a sequence, a condition they share with birds. Most proposed phylogenies for the amniotes require that OL at this position was lost at least twice during their diversification or was evolved independently more than once. Within the five tRNA genes, frequencies of substitutions are much higher in loops than in stems. Many loops vary dramatically in size among the species; in the most extreme case, the D-arm of the Sphenodon tRNA(Cys) is a "D-arm replacement" loop of seven nucleotides. Frequency of transitions in stems is relatively uniform across tRNAs, but frequency of transversions varies greatly. Mismatches in stems are infrequent, and their relative frequency in a specific tRNA is unrelated to the frequency of substitution in the corresponding gene. Several features of mammalian mitochondrial tRNAs are conserved in WANCY tRNAs throughout amniotes. The inferred initiation codon for COI is GTG in crocodilians, turtles, and the snake, a condition they share with fishes, certain amphibians, and birds. TTG appears to be the initiation codon for COI in Sphenodon; if correct, this would be a novel initiation codon for vertebrate mitochondrial DNA. Phylogenetic analyses of the inferred amino acid sequences of ND2 and COI support the sister-group relationship of birds and crocodilians and suggest that mammals are an early derived lineage within the amniotes.   相似文献   

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Yeast mitochondrial DNA codes for a complete set of tRNAs. Although most components necessary for the biosynthesis of mitochondrial tRNA are coded by nuclear genes, there is one genetic locus on mitochondrial DNA necessary for the synthesis of mitochondrial tRNAs other than the mitochondrial tRNA genes themselves. Characterization of mutants by deletion mapping and restriction enzyme mapping studies has provided a precise location of this yeast mitochondrial tRNA synthesis locus. Deletion mutants retaining various segments of mitochondrial DNA were examined for their ability to synthesize tRNAs from the genes they retain. A subset of these strains was also tested for the ability to provide the tRNA synthesis function in complementation tests with deletion mutants unable to synthesize mature mitochondrial tRNAs. By correlating the tRNA synthetic ability with the presence or absence of certain wild-type restriction fragments, we have confined the locus to within 780 base pairs of DNA located between the tRNAMetf gene and tRNAPro gene, at 29 units on the wild-type map. Heretofore, no genetic function or gene product had been localized in this area of the yeast mitochondrial genome.  相似文献   

9.
R Hauser  A Schneider 《The EMBO journal》1995,14(17):4212-4220
The mitochondrial genome of Trypanosoma brucei does not encode any identifiable tRNAs. Instead, mitochondrial tRNAs are synthesized in the nucleus and subsequently imported into mitochondria. In order to analyse the signals which target the tRNAs into the mitochondria, an in vivo import system has been developed: tRNA variants were expressed episomally and their import into mitochondria assessed by purification and nuclease treatment of the mitochondrial fraction. Three tRNA genes were tested in this system: (i) a mutated version of the trypanosomal tRNA(Tyr); (ii) a cytosolic tRNA(His) of yeast; and (iii) a human cytosolic tRNA(Lys). The tRNAs were expressed in their own genomic context, or containing various lengths of the 5'-flanking sequence of the trypanosomal tRNA(Tyr) gene. In all cases efficient import of each of the tRNAs was observed. We independently confirmed the mitochondrial import of the yeast tRNA(His), since in organello [alpha-32P]ATP-labelling of the 3'-end of the tRNA was inhibited by carboxyatractyloside, a highly specific inhibitor of the mitochondrial adenine nucleotide translocator. Import of heterologous tRNAs in their own genomic contexts supports the conclusion that no specific targeting signals are necessary to import tRNAs into mitochondria of T. brucei, but rather that the tRNA structure itself is sufficient to specify import.  相似文献   

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Complete gene organizations of the mitochondrial genomes of three pulmonate gastropods, Euhadra herklotsi, Cepaea nemoralis and Albinaria coerulea, permit comparisons of their gene organizations. Euhadra and Cepaea are classified in the same superfamily, Helicoidea, yet they show several differences in the order of tRNA and protein coding genes. Albinaria is distantly related to the other two genera but shares the same gene order in one part of its mitochondrial genome with Euhadra and in another part with Cepaea. Despite their small size (14.1-14.5 kbp), these snail mtDNAs encode 13 protein genes, two rRNA genes and at least 22 tRNA genes. These genomes exhibit several unusual or unique features compared to other published metazoan mitochondrial genomes, including those of other molluscs. Several tRNAs predicted from the DNA sequences possess bizarre structures lacking either the T stem or the D stem, similar to the situation seen in nematode mt-tRNAs. The acceptor stems of many tRNAs show a considerable number of mismatched basepairs, indicating that the RNA editing process recently demonstrated in Euhadra is widespread in the pulmonate gastropods. Strong selection acting on mitochondrial genomes of these animals would have resulted in frequent occurrence of the mismatched basepairs in regions of overlapping genes.  相似文献   

12.
Stem-loop hairpins formed by mitochondrial light strand replication origins (OL) and by heavy strand DNA coding for tRNAs that form OL-like structures initiate mitochondrial replication. The loops are recognized by one of the two active sites of the vertebrate mitochondrial gamma polymerase, which are homologuous to the active sites of class II amino-acyl tRNA synthetases. Therefore, the polymerase site recognizing the OL loop could recognize tRNA anticodon loops and sequence similarity between anticodon and OL loops should predict initiation of DNA replication at tRNAs. Strengths of genome-wide deamination gradients starting at tRNA genes estimate extents by which replication starts at that tRNA. Deaminations (A→G and C→T) occur proportionally to time spent single stranded by heavy strand DNA during mitochondrial light strand replication. Results show that deamination gradients starting at tRNAs are proportional to sequence similarity between OL and tRNA loops: most for anticodon-, least D-, intermediate for TψC-loops, paralleling tRNA synthetase recognition interactions with these tRNA loops. Structural and sequence similarities with regular OLs predict OL function, loop similarity is dominant in most tRNAs. Analyses of sequence similarity and structure independently substantiate that DNA sequences coding for mitochondrial tRNAs sometimes function as alternative OLs. Pathogenic mutations in anticodon loops increase similarity with the human OL loop, non-pathogenic polymorphisms do not. Similarity/homology alignment hypotheses are experimentally testable in this system.  相似文献   

13.
Transfer RNA genes in the cap-oxil region of yeast mitochondrial DNA.   总被引:12,自引:9,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
A cytoplasmic "petite" (rho-) clone of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been isolated and found through DNA sequencing to contain the genes for cysteine, histidine, leucine, glutamine, lysine, arginine, and glycine tRNAs. This clone, designated DS502, has a tandemly repeated 3.5 kb segment of the wild type genome from 0.7 to 5.6 units. All the tRNA genes are transcribed from the same strand of DNA in the direction cap to oxil. The mitochondrial DNA segment of DS502 fills a sequence gap that existed between the histidine and lysine tRNAs. The new sequence data has made it possible to assign accurate map positions to all the tRNA genes in the cap-oxil span of the yeast mitochondrial genome. A detailed restriction map of the region from 0 to 17 map units along with the locations of 16 tRNA genes have been determined. The secondary structures of the leucine and glutamine tRNAs have been deduced from their gene sequences. The leucine tRNA exhibits 64% sequence homology to an E. coli leucine tRNA.  相似文献   

14.
The mitochondrial genome of Trypanosoma brucei does not appear to encode any tRNA genes. Isolated organellar tRNAs hybridize to nuclear DNA, suggesting that they are synthesized in the nucleus and subsequently imported into the mitochondrion. Most imported tRNAs have cytosolic counterparts, showing identical mobility on two-dimensional polyacrylamide gels. We have compared three nuclear-encoded mitochondrial tRNAs (tRNA(Lys), tRNA(Leu), tRNA(Tyr)) with their cytosolic isoforms by direct enzymatic sequence analysis. Our findings indicate that the primary sequences of the mitochondrial and the corresponding cytosolic tRNAs are identical. However, we have identified a mitochondrion-specific nucleotide modification of each tRNA which is localized to a conserved cytidine residue at the penultimate position 5' of the anticodon. The modification present in mature mitochondrial tRNA(Tyr) was not found in a mutant tRNA(Tyr) defective in splicing in either cytosolic or mitochondrial fractions. The mutant tRNA(Tyr) has been expressed in transformed cells and its import into mitochondria has been demonstrated, suggesting that the modified cytidine residue is not required for import and therefore may be involved in adapting imported tRNAs to specific requirements of the mitochondrial translation machinery.  相似文献   

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The RNA:pseudouridine (Psi)-synthase family is one of the most complex families of RNA modification enzymes. Ten genes encoding putative RNA:Psi-synthases have been identified in S. cerevisiae. Most of the encoded enzymes have been characterized experimentally. Only the putative RNA:Psi-synthase Pus2p (encoded by the YGL063w ORF) had no identified substrate. Here, we analyzed Psi residues in cytoplasmic and mitochondrial tRNAs extracted from S. cerevisiae strains, carrying disruptions in the PUS1 and/or PUS2 ORFs. Our results demonstrate that Pus2p is a mitochondrial-specific tRNA:Psi-synthase acting at positions 27 and 28 in tRNAs. The importance of the Asp56 residue in the conserved ARTD motif of the Pus2p catalytic site is demonstrated in vivo. Interestingly, in spite of the absence of a characteristic N-terminal targeting signal, our data strongly suggest an efficient and rapid targeting of Pus2p in yeast mitochondria. In contradiction with the commonly held idea that a unique nuclear gene encodes the enzyme required for both cytoplasmic and mitochondrial tRNA modifications, here we show the existence of an enzyme specifically dedicated to mitochondrial tRNA modification (Pus2p), the corresponding modification in cytoplasmic tRNAs being catalyzed by another protein (Pus1p).  相似文献   

17.
tRNAs encoded on the mitochondrial DNA of Physarum polycephalum and Didymium nigripes require insertional editing for their maturation. Editing consists of the specific insertion of a single cytidine or uridine relative to the mitochondrial DNA sequence encoding the tRNA. Editing sites are at 14 different locations in nine tRNAs. Cytidine insertion sites can be located in any of the four stems of the tRNA cloverleaf and usually create a G·C base pair. Uridine insertions have been identified in the T loop of tRNALys from Didymium and tRNAGlu from Physarum. In both tRNAs, the insertion creates the GUUC sequence, which is converted to GTΨC (Ψ = pseudouridine) in most tRNAs. This type of tRNA editing is different from other, previously described types of tRNA editing and resembles the mRNA and rRNA editing in Physarum and Didymium. Analogous tRNAs in Physarum and Didymium have editing sites at different locations, indicating that editing sites have been lost, gained, or both since the divergence of Physarum and Didymium. Although cDNAs derived from single tRNAs are generally fully edited, cDNAs derived from unprocessed polycistronic tRNA precursors often lack some of the editing site insertions. This enrichment of partially edited sequences in unprocessed tRNAs may indicate that editing is required for tRNA processing or at least that RNA editing occurs as an early event in tRNA synthesis.  相似文献   

18.
The 13,738 bp mitochondrial DNA from the cestode Echinococcus multilocularis has been sequenced. It contains two major noncoding regions and 36 genes (12 for proteins involved in oxidative phosphorylation, two for rRNAs and 22 for tRNAs) but a gene for ATPase subunit 8 is missing. All genes are transcribed in the same direction. Putative secondary structures of tRNAs indicate that most of them are conventional clover leaves but the dihydrouridine arm is unpaired in tRNA(Ser(AGN)), tRNA(Ser(UCN)), tRNA(Arg) and tRNA(Cys). The base composition at the wobble positions of fourfold degenerate codon families is highly biased toward U and against C.  相似文献   

19.
The mitochondrial genome of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii only encodes three expressed tRNA genes, thus most mitochondrial tRNAs are likely imported. The sharing of tRNAs between chloroplasts and mitochondria has been speculated in this organism. We first demonstrate that no plastidial tRNA is present in mitochondria and that the mitochondrial translation mainly relies on the import of nucleus-encoded tRNA species. Then, using northern analysis, we show that the extent of mitochondrial localization for the 49 tRNA isoacceptor families encoded by the C. reinhardtii nuclear genome is highly variable. Until now the reasons for such variability were unknown. By comparing cytosolic and mitochondrial codon usage with the sub-cellular distribution of tRNAs, we provide unprecedented evidence that the steady-state level of a mitochondrial tRNA is linked not only to the frequency of the cognate codon in mitochondria but also to its frequency in the cytosol, then allowing optimal mitochondrial translation.  相似文献   

20.
Depending on their genetic origin, plant mitochondrial tRNAs are classified into three categories: the "native" and "chloroplast-like" mitochondrial-encoded tRNAs and the imported nuclear-encoded tRNAs. The number and identity of tRNAs in each category change from one plant specie to another. As some plant mitochondrial trn genes were found to be not expressed, and as all Arabidopsis thaliana mitochondrial trn genes are known, we systematically tested the expression of A. thaliana mitochondrial trn genes. Both the "chloroplast-like" trnW and trnM-e genes were found to be not expressed. These exceptions are remarkable since trnW and trnM-e are expressed in the mitochondria of other land plants. Whereas we could not conclude which tRNA(Met) compensates the lack of expression of trnM-e, we showed that the cytosolic tRNA(Trp) is present in A. thaliana mitochondria, thus compensating the absence of expression of the mitochondrial-encoded trnW.  相似文献   

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