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1.
InSaccharomyces cerevisiae the only known role of theCBP2 gene is the excision of the fifth intron of the mitochondrialcyt b gene (bI5). We have cloned theCBP2 gene fromSaccharomyces douglasii (a close relative ofS. cerevisiae). A comparison of theS. douglasii andS. cerevisiae sequences shows that there are 14% nucleotide substitutions in the coding region, with transitions being three times more frequent than transversions. At the protein level sequence identity is 87%. We have demonstrated that theS. douglasii CBP2 gene is essential for respiratory growth in the presence of a wild-typeS. douglasii mitochondrial genome, but not in the presence of an intronlessS. cerevisiae mitochondrial genome. Also theS. douglasii andS. cerevisiae CBP2 genes are completely interchangeable, even though the intron bI5 is absent from theS. douglasii mitochondrial genome.  相似文献   

2.
In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the product of the nuclear gene CBP2 is required exclusively for the splicing of the terminal intron of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene. The homologous gene from the related yeast, Saccharomyces douglasii, has been shown to be essential for respiratory growth in the presence of a wild-type S. douglasii mitochondrial genome and dispensable in the presence of an intronless mitochondrial genome. The two CBP2 genes are functionally interchangeable although the target intron of the S. cerevisiaeCBP2 gene is absent from the S. douglasii mitochondrial genome. To determine the function of the CBP2 gene in S. douglasii mitochondrial pre-RNA processing we have constructed and analyzed interspecific hybrid strains between the nuclear genome of S. cerevisiae carrying an inactive CBP2 gene and S. douglasii mitochondrial genomes with different intron contents. We have demonstrated that inactivation of the S. cerevisiaeCBP2 gene affects the maturation of the S. douglasii LSU pre-RNA, leading to a respiratory-deficient phenotype in the hybrid strains. We have shown that the CBP2 gene is essential for excision of the S. douglasii LSU intron in vivo and that the gene is dispensable when this intron is deleted or replaced by the S. cerevisiae LSU intron.  相似文献   

3.
In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the product of the nuclear gene CBP2 is required exclusively for the splicing of the terminal intron of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene. The homologous gene from the related yeast, Saccharomyces douglasii, has been shown to be essential for respiratory growth in the presence of a wild-type S. douglasii mitochondrial genome and dispensable in the presence of an intronless mitochondrial genome. The two CBP2 genes are functionally interchangeable although the target intron of the S. cerevisiaeCBP2 gene is absent from the S. douglasii mitochondrial genome. To determine the function of the CBP2 gene in S. douglasii mitochondrial pre-RNA processing we have constructed and analyzed interspecific hybrid strains between the nuclear genome of S. cerevisiae carrying an inactive CBP2 gene and S. douglasii mitochondrial genomes with different intron contents. We have demonstrated that inactivation of the S. cerevisiaeCBP2 gene affects the maturation of the S. douglasii LSU pre-RNA, leading to a respiratory-deficient phenotype in the hybrid strains. We have shown that the CBP2 gene is essential for excision of the S. douglasii LSU intron in vivo and that the gene is dispensable when this intron is deleted or replaced by the S. cerevisiae LSU intron. Received: 1 October 1997 / Accepted: 18 November 1997  相似文献   

4.
Summary The Saccharomyces cerevisiae nuclear gene NAM2 codes for mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase (mLRS). Herbert et al. (1988, EMBO J 7:473–483) proposed that this protein is involved in mitochondrial RNA splicing. Here we present the construction and analyses of nine mutations obtained by creating two-codon insertions within the NAM2 gene. Three of these prevent respiration while maintaining the mitochondrial genome. These three mutants: (1) display in vitro a mLRS activity ranging from 0%–50% that of the wild type: (2) allow in vivo the synthesis of several mitochondrially encoded proteins; (3) prevent the synthesis of the COXII protein but not of its mRNA; (4) abolish the splicing of the group I introns bI4 and aI4; and (5) affect significantly the excision of the group I introns bI2, bI3 and aI3. Importation of the bI4 maturase from the cytoplasm into mitochondria in a nam2 mutant strain does not restore the excision of the introns bI4 and aI4 implying that the splicing deficiency does not result from the absence of the bI4 maturase. We conclude that the mLRS is a splicing factor essential for the excision of the group I introns bI4 and aI4 and probably important for the excision of other group I introns.  相似文献   

5.
Summary We studied the NAM2 genes of Saccharomyces douglasii and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and showed that they are interchangeable for all the known functions of these genes, both mitochondrial protein synthesis and mitochondrial mRNA splicing. This confirms the prediction that the S. douglasii NAM2D gene encodes the mitochondrial leucyl tRNA synthetase (EC 6.1.1.4). The observation that these enzymes are interchangeable for their mRNA splicing functions, even though there are significant differences in the intron/exon structure of their mitochondrial genome, suggests that they may have a general role in yeast mitochondrial RNA splicing. A short open reading frame (ORF) precedes the synthetase-encoding ORF, and we showed that at least in S. cerevisiae this is not essential for the expression of the gene; however, it may be involved in a more subtle type of regulation. Sequence comparisons of S. douglasii and S. cerevisiae revealed a particularly interesting situation from the evolutionary point of view. It appears that the two yeasts have diverged relatively recently: there is remarkable nucleotide sequence conservation, with no deletions or insertions, but numerous (albeit non-saturating) silent substitutions resulting from transitions. This applies not only to the NAM2 coding regions, but also to two other ORFs flanking the NAM2 ORF. The regions between the ORFs (believed to be intergenic regions) are much less conserved, with several deletions and insertions. Thus S. douglasii and S. cerevisiae provide an ideal system for the study of molecular evolution, being two yeasts caught in the act of speciation.  相似文献   

6.
TheNAM2 gene ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae encodes the mitochondrial leucyl tRNA synthetase (mLRS), which is necessary for the excision of the fourth intron of the mitochondrialcytb gene (bI4) and the fourth intron of the mitochondrialcoxI gene (aI4), as well as for mitochondrial protein synthesis. Some dominant mutant alleles of the gene are able to suppress mutations that inactivate the bI4 maturase, which is essential for the excision of the introns aI4 and bI4. Here we report mutagenesis studies which focus on the splicing and suppressor functions of the protein. Small deletions in the C-terminal region of the protein preferentially reduce the splicing, but not the synthetase activity; and all the C-terminal deletions tested abolish the suppressor activity. Mutations which increase the volume of the residue at position 240 in the wild-type mLRS without introducing a charge, lead to a suppressor activity. The mutant 238C, which is located in the suppressor region, has a reduced synthetase activity and no detectable splicing activity. These data show that the splicing and suppressor functions are linked and that the suppressor activity of the mutant alleles results from a modification of the wild-type splicing activity.  相似文献   

7.
Ccm1p is a nuclear-encoded PPR (pentatricopeptide repeat) protein that localizes into mitochondria of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. It was first defined as an essential factor to remove the bI4 [COB (cytochrome b) fourth intron)] and aI4 [COX1 (cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1) fourth intron] of pre-mRNAs, along with bI4 maturase, a protein encoded by part of bI4 and preceding exons that removes the intronic RNA sequence that codes for it. Later on, Ccm1p was described as key to maintain the steady-state levels of the mitoribosome small subunit RNA (15S rRNA). bI4 maturase is produced inside the mitochondria and therefore its activity depends on the functionality of mitochondrial translation. This report addresses the dilemma of whether Ccm1p supports bI4 maturase activity by keeping steady-state levels of 15S rRNA or separately and directly supports bI4 maturase activity per se. Experiments involving loss of Ccm1p, SMDC (sudden mitochondrial deprivation of Ccm1p) and mutations in one of the PPR (pentatricopeptide repeat) motifs revealed that the failure of bI4 maturase activity in CCM1 deletion mutants was not due to a malfunction of the translational machinery. Both functions were found to be independent, defining Ccm1p as a moonlighting protein. bI4 maturase activity was significantly more dependent on Ccm1p levels than the maintenance of 15S rRNA. The novel strategy of SMDC described here allowed the study of immediate short-term effects, before the mutant phenotype was definitively established. This approach can be also applied for further studies on 15S rRNA stability and mitoribosome assembly.  相似文献   

8.
Single-read sequence analysis of the termini of eight randomly picked clones ofAshbya gossypii genomic DNA revealed seven sequences with homology toSaccharomyces cerevisiae genes (15% to 69% on the amino acid level). One of these sequences appeared to code for the carboxy-terminus of threonine synthase, the product of theS. cerevisiae THR4 gene (52.4% identity over 82 amino acids). We cloned and sequenced the complete putativeAgTHR4 gene ofA. gossypii. It comprises 512 codons, two less than theS. cerevisiae THR4 gene. Overall identity at the amino acid sequence level is 67.4%. A continuous stretch of 32 amino acids displaying complete identity between these two fungal threonine synthases presumably contains the pyridoxal phosphate attachment site. Disruption of theA. gossypii gene led to threonine auxotrophy, which could be complemented by transformation with replicating plasmids carrying theAgTHR4 gene and variousS. cerevisiae ARS elements. Using these plasmids only very weak complementation of aS. cerevisiae thr4 mutation was observed. Investigation of sequences adjacent to theAgTHR4 gene identified three additional ORFs. Surprisingly, the order and orientation of these four ORFs is conserved inA. gossypii andS. cerevisiae.  相似文献   

9.
The terminal intron (bI2) of the yeast mitochondrial cytochrome b gene is a group I intron capable of self-splicing in vitro at high concentrations of Mg2+. Excision of bI2 in vivo, however, requires a protein encoded by the nuclear gene CBP2. The CBP2 protein has been partially purified from wild-type yeast mitochondria and shown to promote splicing at physiological concentrations of Mg2+. The self-splicing and protein-dependent splicing reactions utilized a guanosine nucleoside cofactor, the hallmark of group I intron self-splicing reactions. Furthermore, mutations that abolished the autocatalytic activity of bI2 also blocked protein-dependent splicing. These results indicated that protein-dependent excision of bI2 is an RNA-catalyzed process involving the same two-step transesterification mechanism responsible for self-splicing of group I introns. We propose that the CBP2 protein binds to the bI2 precursor, thereby stabilizing the catalytically active structure of the RNA. The same or a similar RNA structure is probably induced by high concentrations of Mg2+ in the absence of protein. Binding of the CBP2 protein to the unspliced precursor was supported by the observation that the protein-dependent reaction was saturable by the wild-type precursor. Protein-dependent splicing was competitively inhibited by excised bI2 and by a splicing-defective precursor with a mutation in the 5' exon near the splice site but not by a splicing-defective precursor with a mutation in the core structure. Binding of the CBP2 protein to the precursor RNA had an effect on the 5' splice site helix, as evidenced by suppression of the interaction of an exogenous dinucleotide with the internal guide sequence.  相似文献   

10.
TheNAM2 gene ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae encodes the mitochondrial leucyl tRNA synthetase (mLRS), which is necessary for the excision of the fourth intron of the mitochondrialcytb gene (bI4) and the fourth intron of the mitochondrialcoxI gene (aI4), as well as for mitochondrial protein synthesis. Some dominant mutant alleles of the gene are able to suppress mutations that inactivate the bI4 maturase, which is essential for the excision of the introns aI4 and bI4. Here we report mutagenesis studies which focus on the splicing and suppressor functions of the protein. Small deletions in the C-terminal region of the protein preferentially reduce the splicing, but not the synthetase activity; and all the C-terminal deletions tested abolish the suppressor activity. Mutations which increase the volume of the residue at position 240 in the wild-type mLRS without introducing a charge, lead to a suppressor activity. The mutant 238C, which is located in the suppressor region, has a reduced synthetase activity and no detectable splicing activity. These data show that the splicing and suppressor functions are linked and that the suppressor activity of the mutant alleles results from a modification of the wild-type splicing activity.  相似文献   

11.
Dominant mutations in the yeast nuclear gene NAM2 cure the RNA splicing deficiency resulting from the inactivation of the bI4 maturase encoded by the fourth intron of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene. This maturase is required to splice the fourth intron of this gene and to splice the fourth intron of the mitochondrial gene oxi3 encoding cytochrome oxidase subunit I. We have cloned the nuclear gene NAM2, which codes for two overlapping RNAs, 3.2 kb and 3.0 kb long, which are transcribed in the same direction but differ at their 5' ends. NAM2 compensating mutations probably result from point mutations in the structural gene. Integration of the cloned gene occurs at its homologous locus on the right arm of chromosome XII. Inactivation of the NAM2 gene either by transplacement with a deleted copy of the gene, or by disruption, is not lethal to the cell, but leads to the destruction of the mitochondrial genome with the production of 100% cytoplasmic petites.  相似文献   

12.
Summary We have characterized the nuclear geneNAM8 inSaccharomyces cerevisiae. It acts as a suppressor of mitochondrial splicing deficiencies when present on a multicopy plasmid. The suppressed mutations affect RNA folding and are located in both group I and group II introns. The gene is weakly transcribed in wildtype strains, its overexpression is a prerequisite for the suppressor action. Inactivation of theNAM8 gene does not affect cell viability, mitochondrial function or mitochondrial genome stability. TheNAM8 gene encodes a protein of 523 amino acids which includes two conserved (RNP) motifs common to RNA-binding proteins from widely different organisms. This homology with RNA-binding proteins, together with the intronic location of the suppressed mitochondrial mutations, suggests that the NAM8 protein could be a non-essential component of the mitochondrial splicing machinery and, when present in increased amounts, it could convert a deficient intron RNA folding pattern into a productive one.  相似文献   

13.
We have characterised aSaccharomyces cerevisiae cDNA (cDNA13), originally isolated on the basis of the short half-life of the corresponding mRNA. We show here that its sequence is closely related to that of the genes encoding ribosomal proteins K37, KD4 and K5 ofSchizosaccharomyces pombe. ‘mRNA13’ also behaves like other mRNAs encoding ribosomal proteins, in that its abundance increases sharply when glucose is added to cells grown on ethanol (nutrient-up shift), and declines when cells are subjected to a mild heat-shock. Unspliced mRNA13 accumulates when cells bearing a temperature-sensitive splicing mutation are grown at the restrictive temperature. The gene(s) corresponding to cDNA13, like other ribosomal protein genes ofS. cerevisiae, thus contain an intron. Southern blot analysis indicates the presence of two separate loci related to cDNA13 in theS. cerevisiae genome. From the sequence of one of these, a complete polypeptide sequence was deduced. The first 40 amino acids are identical to those of YL6, aS. cerevisiae ribosomal protein characterised only by N-terminal protein sequence analysis. There is clear evidence within the genomic sequence for the predicted intron, and for elements similar to those that regulate expression of otherS. cerevisiae ribosomal protein genes.  相似文献   

14.
15.
InSaccharomyces cerevisiae, most of the cellular chitin is produced by chitin synthase III, which requires the product encoded by theCSD2/CAL1/DIT101/KT12 gene. We have identified, isolated and structurally characterized aCSD2/CAL1/DIT101/KT12 homologue in the filamentous ascomyceteNeurospora crassa and have used a “reverse genetics” approach to determine its role in vivo. The yeast gene was used as a heterologous probe for the isolation of aN. crassa gene (designatedchs-4) encoding a polypeptide belonging to a class of chitin synthases which we have designated class IV. The predicted polypeptide encoded by this gene is highly similar to those ofS. cerevisiae andCandida albicans. N. crassa strains in whichchs-4 had been inactivated by the Repeat-Induced Point mutation (RIP) process grew and developed in a normal manner under standard growth conditions. However, when grown in the presence of sorbose (a carbon source which induces morphological changes accompanied by elevated chitin content), chitin levels in thechs-4 RIP strain were significantly lower than those observed in the wild type. We suggest that CHS4 may serve as an auxiliary enzyme inN. crassa and that, in contrast to yeasts, it is possible that filamentous fungi may have more than one class IV chitin synthase.  相似文献   

16.
Native folding and splicing by the Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondrial bI5 group I intron RNA is facilitated by both the S. cerevisiae CBP2 and Neurospora crassa CYT-18 protein cofactors. Both protein-bI5 RNA complexes splice at similar rates, suggesting that the RNA active site structure is similar in both ribonucleoproteins. In contrast, the two proteins assemble with the bI5 RNA by distinct mechanisms and bind opposing, but partially overlapping, sides of the group I intron catalytic core. Assembly with CBP2 is limited by a slow, unimolecular RNA folding step characterized by a negligible activation enthalpy. We show that assembly with CYT-18 shows four distinctive features. (1) CYT-18 binds stably to the bI5 RNA at the diffusion controlled limit, but assembly to a catalytically active RNA structure is still limited by RNA folding, as visualized directly using time-resolved footprinting. (2) This mechanism of rapid stable protein binding followed by subsequent assembly steps has a distinctive kinetic signature: the apparent ratio of k(off) to k(on), determined in a partitioning experiment, differs from the equilibrium K(d) by a large factor. (3) Assembly with CYT-18 is characterized by a large activation enthalpy, consistent with a rate limiting conformational rearrangement. (4) Because assembly from the kinetically trapped state is faster at elevated temperature, we can identify conditions where CYT-18 accelerates (catalyzes) bI5 RNA folding relative to assembly with CBP2.  相似文献   

17.
The development of a xylose-fermentingSaccharomyces cerevisiae yeast would be of great benefit to the bioethanol industry. The conversion of xylose to ethanol involves a cascade of enzymatic reactions and processes. Xylose (aldose) reductases catalyse the conversion of xylose to xylitol. The aim of this study was to clone, characterise and express a cDNA copy of a novel aldose reductase (NCAR-X) from the filamentous fungusNeurospora crassa inS. cerevisiae. NCAR-X harbours an open reading frame (ORF) of 900 nucleotides. This ORF encodes a protein (NCAR-X, assigned NCBI protein accession ID: XP_956921) consisting of 300 amino acids, with a predicted molecular weight of 34 kDa. TheNCAR-X-encoded aldose reductase showed significant homology to the xylose reductases ofCandida tenuis andPichia stipitis. WhenNCAR-X was expressed under the control of phosphoglycerate kinase I gene (PGK1) regulatory sequences inS. cerevisiae, its expression resulted in the production of biologically active xylose reductase. Small-scale oxygen-limited xylose fermentation with theNCAR-X containingS. cerevisiae strains resulted in the production of less xylitol and at least 15% more ethanol than the strains transformed with theP. stipitis xylose reductase gene (PsXYL1). TheNCAR-X-encoded enzyme produced byS. cerevisiae was NADPH-dependent and no activity was observed in the presence of NADH. The co-expression of theNCAR-X andPsXYL1 gene constructs inS. cerevisiae constituted an important part of an extensive research program aimed at the development of xylolytic yeast strains capable of producing ethanol from plant biomass.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Physical mapping of the mitochondrial DNA of the wild-typeSaccharomyces cerevisiae strainRXII revealed that most of the restriction sites as well as the location of the apocytochromeb gene were identical in comparison with the known maps of the mitochondrial genome in otherSaccharomyces cerevisiae strains. In the middle of theSalI linearized map of theRXII mitochondrial DNA, a deletion was detected which resulted in the loss of twoEcoRI and oneBamHI restriction sites. The corresponding region, however, exists in most other laboratory strains ofSaccharomyces mapped so far. This region overlaps the introns aI2 and aI3 surrounding exon A3 sequences of the subunit 1 of the cytochrome oxidase gene. The nucleotide sequence of the subunit 1 gene showed that theBamHI site was located close to the aI3-A4 intron-exon junction and the distalEcoRI site close to the aI2-A2 boundary. I therefore conclude that these two introns are deleted in the mitochondrial genome of strainRXII. The exon A3 must have been conserved since this strain was respiratory competent. This result, while being a good example of the morphological diversity of a genome with the same function, may contribute to an understanding of the role of introns in the mitochondrial split genes in yeast.  相似文献   

20.
《BBA》2014,1837(2):326-334
The genome of Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains 35 members of the mitochondrial carrier family, nearly all of which have been functionally characterized. In this study, the identification of the mitochondrial carrier for adenosine 5′-phosphosulfate (APS) is described. The corresponding gene (YPR011c) was overexpressed in bacteria. The purified protein was reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles and its transport properties and kinetic parameters were characterized. It transported APS, 3′-phospho-adenosine 5′-phosphosulfate, sulfate and phosphate almost exclusively by a counter-exchange mechanism. Transport was saturable and inhibited by bongkrekic acid and other inhibitors. To investigate the physiological significance of this carrier in S. cerevisiae, mutants were subjected to thermal shock at 45 °C in the presence of sulfate and in the absence of methionine. At 45 °C cells lacking YPR011c, engineered cells (in which APS is produced only in mitochondria) and more so the latter cells, in which the exit of mitochondrial APS is prevented by the absence of YPR011cp, were less thermotolerant. Moreover, at the same temperature all these cells contained less methionine and total glutathione than wild-type cells. Our results show that S. cerevisiae mitochondria are equipped with a transporter for APS and that YPR011cp-mediated mitochondrial transport of APS occurs in S. cerevisiae under thermal stress conditions.  相似文献   

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