首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
2.
Summary The 5S ribosomal RNAs from the cell cytoplasm and cyanelle (photosynthetic organelle) ofCyanophora paradoxa have been isolated and sequenced. The cellular and cyanelle 5S rRNAs were 119 and 118 nucleotides in length, respectively. Both RNAs exhibited typical 5S secondary structure, but the primary sequence of the cellular species was clearly eukaryotic in nature, while that of the organellar species was prokaryotelike. The primary sequence of the cyanellar 5S rRNA was most homologous to cyanobacterial 5S sequences, yet possessed secondary-structural features characteristic of higher-plant chloroplast 5S rRNAs. Both sequence comparison and structural analysis indicated an evolutionary position for cyanelle 5S rRNA intermediate between blue-green alga and chloroplast 5S rRNAs.Contribution from the Department of Biochemistry, School of Agriculture and Life Sciences and School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina. This is paper no. 10259 of the Journal Series of the North Carolina Agricultural Research Service, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-7601, USA  相似文献   

3.
Envelope membranes were isolated by sucrose density gradient floatation centrifugation from the homogenate of cyanelles prepared from Cyanophora paradoxa. Two yellow bands were separated after 40 h of centrifugation. The buoyant density of one of the two fractions (fraction Y2) coincided with that of inner envelope membranes of spinach or plasma membranes of cyanobacteria. The other yellow fraction (fraction Y1) migrated to top of sucrose-gradient even at 0% sucrose. Pigment analysis revealed that the heavy yellow fraction was rich in zeaxanthin while the light fraction was rich in β-carotene, and the both fractions contained practically no chlorophylls. Another yellow fraction (fraction Y3) was isolated from the phycobiliprotein fraction, which was the position where the sample was placed for gradient centrifugation. Its buoyant density and absorption spectra were similar to outer membranes of cyanobacteria. We have assigned fractions Y2 and Y3 as inner and outer envelope membrane fractions of cyanelles, respectively. Protein compositions were rather different between the two envelope membranes indicating little cross-contamination among the fractions. H. Koike and Y. Ikeda contributed equally.  相似文献   

4.
Glaucocystophyte algae (sensu Kies, Berl. Deutsch. Bot. Ges. 92, 1979) contain plastids (cyanelles) that retain the peptidoglycan wall of the putative cyanobacterial endosymbiont; this and other ultrastructural characters (e.g., unstacked thylakoids, phycobilisomes) have suggested that cyanelles are primitive plastids that may represent undeveloped associations between heterotrophic host cells (i.e., glaucocystophytes) and cyanobacteria. To test the monophyly of glaucocystophyte cyanelles and to determine their evolutionary relationship to other plastids, complete 16S ribosomal RNA sequences were determined for Cyanophora paradoxa, Glaucocystis nostochinearum, Glaucosphaera vacuolata, and Gloeochaete wittrockiana. Plastid rRNAs were analyzed with the maximum-likelihood, maximumparsimony, and neighbor joining methods. The phylogenetic analyses show that the cyanelles of C. paradoxa, G. nostochinearum, and G. wittrockiana form a distinct evolutionary lineage; these cyanelles presumably share a monophyletic origin. The rDNA sequence of G. vacuolata was positioned within the nongreen plastid lineage. This result is consistent with analyses of nuclear-encoded rRNAs that identify G. vacuolata as a rhodophyte and support its removal from the Glaucocystophyta. Results of a global search with the maximumlikelihood method suggest that cyanelles are the first divergence among all plastids; this result is consistent with a single loss of the peptidoglycan wall in plastids after the divergence of the cyanelles. User-defined tree analyses with the maximum-likelihood method indicate, however, that the position of the cyanelles is not stable within the rRNA phylogenies. Both maximumparsimony and neighbor-joining analyses showed a close evolutionary relationship between cyanelles and nongreen plastids; these phylogenetic methods were sensitive to inclusion/exclusion of the G. wittrockiana cyanelle sequence. Base compositional bias within the G. wittrockiana 16S rRNA may explain this result. Taken together the phylogenetic analyses are interpreted as supporting a near-simultaneous radiation of cyanelles and green and nongreen plastids; these organelles are all rooted within the cyanobacteria.Correspondence to: D. Bhattacharya  相似文献   

5.
6.
Cyanophora paradoxa is a flagellated protozoan which possesses unusual, chloroplast-like organelles referred to as cyanelles. The psbE and psbF genes, which encode the two apoprotein subunits of cytochrome b-559, have been cloned from the cyanelle genome of C. paradoxa. The complete nucleotide sequences of these genes and their flanking sequences were determined by the chain-termination, dideoxy method. The psbE gene is composed of 75 codons and predicts a polypeptide of 8462 Da that is seven to nine residues smaller than most other psbE gene products. The psbF gene consists of 43 codons and predicts a polypeptide of 4761 Da. Two open reading frames, whose sequences are highly conserved among cyanobacteria and numerous higher plants, were located in the nucleotide sequence downstream from the psbF gene. The first open reading frame, denoted psbI, is composed of 39 codons, while the second open reading frame, denoted psbJ, is composed of 41 codons. The predicted amino acid sequences of the psbI and psbJ gene products predict proteins of 5473 and 3973 Da respectively. These proteins are probably integral membrane proteins anchored in the membrane by a single, transmembrane alpha helix. The psbEFIJ genes are probably co-transcribed and constitute an operon as found for other organisms. Each of the four genes is preceded by a polypurine sequence which resembles the consensus ribsosome binding sequences for Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The ribosomal protein HS23 from the 30S subunit of the extreme halophilicHaloarcula marismortui, belonging to the group of archaea, was isolated either by RP-HLPLC or two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The complete amino acid sequence was determined by automated N-terminal microsequencing. The protein consists of 123 residues with a corresponding molecular mass of 12,552 Da as determined by electrospray mass spectroscopy; the pI is 11.04. Homology studies reveal similarities to the eukaryotic ribosomal protein S8 fromHomo sapiens, Rattus norvegicus, Leishmania major, andSaccharomyces cerevisiae.Abbreviations H. marismortui Haloarcula marismortui - PVDF polyvinylidene difluoride - PTH phenylthiohydantoin - RP-HPLC reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography - TFA trifluoro acetic acid - TP30 total protein mixture from the 30S ribosomal subunit ofH. marismortui  相似文献   

9.
We isolated a 38 kDa ssDNA-binding protein from the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 6301 and determined its N-terminal amino acid sequence. A genomic clone encoding the 38 kDa protein was isolated by using a degenerate oligonucleotide probe based on the amino acid sequence. The nucleotide sequence and predicted amino acid sequence revealed that the 38 kDa protein is 306 amino acids long and homologous to the nuclear-encoded 370 amino acid chloroplast ribosomal protein CS1 of spinach (48% identity), therefore identifying it as ribosomal protein (r-protein) S1. Cyanobacterial and chloroplast S1 proteins differ in size from Escherichia coli r-protein S1 (557 amino acids). This provides an additional evidence that cyanobacteria are closely related to chloroplasts. The Synechococcus gene rps1 encoding S1 is located 1.1 kb downstream from psbB, which encodes the photosystem 11 P680 chlorophyll a apoprotein. An open reading frame encoding a potential protein of 168 amino acids is present between psbB and rps1 and its deduced amino acid sequence is similar to that of E. coli hypothetical 17.2 kDa protein. Northern blot analysis showed that rps1 is transcribed as a monocistronic mRNA.  相似文献   

10.
The small- and large-subunit mitochondrial ribosomal RNA genes (mt-s-rRNA and mt-1-rRNA) of the nematode worms Caenorhabditis elegans and Ascaris suum encode the smallest rRNAs so far reported for metazoa. These size reductions correlate with the previously described, smaller, structurally anomalous mt-tRNAs of C. elegans and A. suum. Using primer extension analysis, the 5 end nucleotides of the mt-s-rRNA and mt-1-rRNA genes were determined to be adjacent to the 3 end nucleotides of the tRNAGlu and tRNAHis genes, respectively. Detailed, consensus secondary-structure models were constructed for the mt-s-rRNA genes and the 3 64% of mt-1-rRNA genes of the two nematodes. The mt-s-rRNA secondary-structure model bears a remarkable resemblance to the previously defined universal core structure of E. coli 16S rRNA: most of the nucleotides that have been classified as variable or semiconserved in the E. coli model appear to have been eliminated from the C. elegans and A. suum sequences. Also, the secondary structure model constructed for the 3 64% of the mt-1-rRNA is similar to the corresponding portion of the previously defined E. coli 23S rRNA core secondary structure. The proposed C. elegans/A. suum mt-s-rRNA and mt-1-rRNA models include all of the secondary-structure element-forming sequences that in E. coli rRNAs contain nucleotides important for A-site and P-site (but not E-site) interactions with tRNAs. Sets of apparently homologous sequences within the mt-s-rRNA and mt-1-rRNA core structures, derived by alignment of the C. elegans and A. suum mt-rRNAs to the corresponding mt-rRNAs of other eukaryotes, and E. coli rRNAs were used in maximum-likelihood analyses. The patterns of divergence of metazoan phyla obtained show considerable agreement with the most prevalent metazoan divergence patterns derived from more classical, morphological, and developmental data.Correspondence to: D.R. Wolstenholme  相似文献   

11.
Thylakoid membranes and Photosystem I (PS I) complexes were isolated from a glaucocystophyte, Cyanophora paradoxa, which is thought to have the most primitive ‘plastids’, and the proteins related to PS I were examined. The intrinsic light-harvesting chlorophyll protein complexes of PS I (LHC I) were not detected by an immunological method. The PS I complexes consisted of at least eight low-molecular-mass proteins in addition to PS I reaction center proteins. The N-terminal sequence of the PsaD protein has higher homology to that of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and land plants, than to that of other algae or cyanobacteria. On the other hand, the PsaL sequence has the highest homology to those of cyanobacteria. Taking into account the other sequences of PS I components whose genes are encoded in the cyanelle genome, and the fact that LHC I is not detected, it is concluded that PS I of C. paradoxa has chimeric characteristics of both ‘green’ lineages and cyanobacteria. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

12.
Summary A 6.5 kb region from the genome of the cyanobacterium, Anacystis nidulans 6301 was cloned using the tobacco chloroplast gene for ribosomal protein S12 as a probe. Sequence analysis revealed the presence of genes for ribosomal proteins S12 and S6 and elongation factors EF-G and EF-Tu in this DNA region. The arrangement is rps12 (124 codons)-167 bp spacer-rps7 (156 codons)-77 bp spacer-fus (694 codons)-26 bp spacer-tufA (409 codons), which is similar to that of the Escherichia coli str operon. The deduced amino acid sequences of the A. nidulans S12 and EF-Tu show high homology (72%–82%) with the E. coli and chloroplast counterparts while those of the A. nidulans S7 and EF-G give low homology (51%–59%). Striking structural homology was found between the potential S7 binding region of 16S rRNA and the beginning of S7 mRNA, suggesting that feedback regulation of rps7 expression operates in A. nidulans.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The total nucleotide sequence of the rDNA of Giardia muris, an intestinal protozoan parasite of rodents, has been determined. The repeat unit is 7668 basepairs (bp) in size and consists of a spacer of 3314 bp, a small-subunit rRNA (SSU-rRNA) gene of 1429, and a large-subunit rRNA (LSU-rRNA) gene of 2698 bp. The spacer contains long direct repeats and is heterogeneous in size. The LSU-rRNA of G. muris was compared to that of the human intestinal parasite Giardia duodenalis, to the bird parasite Giardia ardeae, and to that of Escherichia coli. The LSU-rRNA has a size comparable to the 23S rRNA of E. coli but shows structural features typical for eukaryotes. Some variable regions are typically small and account for the overall smaller size of this rRNA. The structure of the G. muris LSU-rRNA is similar to that of the other Giardia rRNA, but each rRNA has characteristic features residing in a number of variable regions.Offprint requests to: H. van Keulen  相似文献   

14.
15.
A segment of a ribosomal protein operon from a plant-pathogenic mycoplasma-like organism (MLO) was cloned and sequenced, to provide supplemental molecular data pertinent to the question of MLO phylogeny. Comparisons of the deduced amino acid sequences indicate an ancient divergence of the MLOs from the animal-pathogenic mycoplasmas. Furthermore, although both the plant and animal pathogens have A-T rich genomes, a fundamental difference was apparent in their usage of the UGA codon.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The DNA sequences of the mercuric resistance determinants of plasmid R100 and transposon Tn501 distal to the gene (merA) coding for mercuric reductase have been determined. These 1.4 kilobase (kb) regions show 79% identity in their nucleotide sequence and in both sequences two common potential coding sequences have been identified. In R100, the end of the homologous sequence is disrupted by an 11.2 kb segment of DNA which encodes the sulfonamide and streptomycin resistance determinants of Tn21. This insert contains terminal inverted repeat sequences and is flanked by a 5 base pair (bp) direct repeat. The first of the common potential coding sequences is likely to be that of the merD gene. Induction experiments and mercury volatilization studies demonstrate an enhancing but non-essential role for these merA-distal coding sequences in mercury resistance and volatilization. The potential coding sequences have predicted codon usages similar to those found in other Tn501 and R100 mer genes.  相似文献   

17.
A 6.5 kb region from the genome of the cyanobacterium Spirulina platensis was cloned using as a probe the Escherichia coli gene for ribosomal protein S2. Sequence analysis revealed, in this region, the presence of the gene for ribosomal protein S2 and part of the gene for the elongation factor Ts (EF-Ts). The arrangement rpsB-spacer-tsf resembles that reported for E. coli. The deduced amino acid sequences of the platensis S2 and EF-Ts show significant homology with the E. coli counterparts.  相似文献   

18.
Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough contains a family of genes for methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs). Here we report the complete sequence of the gene for Desulfovibrio chemoreceptor H (dcrH). The deduced amino acid sequence of DcrH protein, which has an enlarged N-terminal, ligand binding domain, indicates a structure similar to that of other MCPs. Comparison of the sequences for DcrA, determined earlier, and DcrH indicated that similarity is essentially limited to the C-terminal excitation region. The dcr gene family differs, in this respect, from mcp gene families in other eubacteria (e.g. Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis), where MCPs share significant homology throughout their C-terminal signal transduction domains. This may point to an ancient evolutionary origin of the dcr gene family, which is widely distributed throughout the genus Desulfovibrio. The evolutionary origin of mcp genes was traced by comparing nucleotide sequences for the excitation region that is common to all MCPs. Phylogenetic analysis of sequences for thirty mcp genes from nine eubacterial and one archaebacterial species suggested that multiplication of mcp genes has occurred at least twice since the eubacteria diverged from the archaebacteria.Nucleotide accession number: The nucleotide sequence reported in this paper has been entered into GenBank under accession number U30319. Phone: 403-220-6388. Fax: 403-289-9311. Electronic mail address: voordouw@acs.ucalgary.ca.  相似文献   

19.
Summary A cosmid bank of Methanococcus voltae DNA was obtained in Escherichia coli after ligation of partially HindIII-digested M. voltae DNA in the HindIII site of the transferable cosmid pVK100. The bank was used to perform complementation experiments with E. coli auxotrophic mutants. Five cosmids complementing trpA shared three adjacent HindIII fragments of 2.1, 2.3 and 14 kb. Two of these cosmids also complemented trpD and carried an additional 4.2 kb HindIII fragment. The trpA- and trpD-complementing regions were more precisely localized using Tn5 mutagenesis. A 1.7 kb PstI fragment, cloned into pUC9 in both orientations, was responsible for the trpA complementation. This fragment was sequenced and an open reading frame (ORF) of 852 nucleotides (ORFtrpA) encoding a 284 amino acid polypeptide of mol. wt. 31938 was found. The amino acid sequence was compared with that of the subunit of tryptophan synthase (trpA gene product) from nine eubacterial species and to the N-terminal part of the tryptophan synthase of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (TRP5 gene product). Similarity varied from 24% (Brevibacterium lactofermentum) to 35% (S. cerevisiae). The nucleotide sequence of the region upstream from M. voltae ORFtrpA was determined and revealed the presence of an ORF of 1227 nucleotides (ORFtrpB) encoding a 409 amino acid polypeptide of mol. wt. 44634. The polypeptide sequence was similar to the subunit of tryptophan synthase (trpB gene product) from six eubacterial species and to the C-terminal part of the tryptophan synthase of S. cerevisiae. Similarity varied from 49% (S. cerevisiae, B. lactofermentum) to 58% (Pseudomonas aeruginosa). This high conservation supports the hypothesis of a common ancestor for the trpA and trpB genes of archaebacteria, eubacteria and eucaryotes. M. voltae ORFtrpA and ORFtrpB, which are transcribed in the same direction, are separated by a 37 bp AT-rich region. Immediately upstream from ORFtrpB, the 3 end of an ORF homologous to E. coli and Bacillus subtilis trpF was found. As the trpD-complementing region was located upstream from the trpFBA sequenced region, the organization of trp genes in the archaebacterium might thus be trpDFBA. Such an organization resembles that of enteric eubacteria, in which the trpEDCFBA genes are grouped in a single operon. However, M. voltae ORFtrpA and ORFtrpB do not overlap, in contrast with what is found in most eubacteria.  相似文献   

20.
Summary In order to study the organization of the ribosomal RNA genes of Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae the rRNA genes were cloned in phage vectors EMBL3 and EMBL4. By subcloning the restriction fragments into various plasmids and analysing the resulting clones by Southern and Northern blot hybridization, a restriction map of the rRNA genes was generated and the organization of the rRNA genes was determined. The results show that the genes for the 16S and 23S rRNAs are closely spaced and occur only once in the genome, whereas the 5S rRNA gene is separated from the other two genes by more than 4 kb.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号