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1.
Xylose reductase (XR) is a key enzyme in D-xylose metabolism, catalyzing the reduction of D-xylose to xylitol. An NADH-preferring XR was purified to homogeneity from Candida parapsilosis KFCC-10875, and the xyl1 gene encoding a 324-amino-acid polypeptide with a molecular mass of 36,629 Da was subsequently isolated using internal amino acid sequences and 5' and 3' rapid amplification of cDNA ends. The C. parapsilosis XR showed high catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km = 1.46 s(-1) mM(-1)) for D-xylose and showed unusual coenzyme specificity, with greater catalytic efficiency with NADH (kcat/Km = 1.39 x 10(4) s(-1) mM(-1)) than with NADPH (kcat/Km = 1.27 x 10(2) s(-1) mM(-1)), unlike all other aldose reductases characterized. Studies of initial velocity and product inhibition suggest that the reaction proceeds via a sequentially ordered Bi Bi mechanism, which is typical of XRs. Candida tropicalis KFCC-10960 has been reported to have the highest xylitol production yield and rate. It has been suggested, however, that NADPH-dependent XRs, including the XR of C. tropicalis, are limited by the coenzyme availability and thus limit the production of xylitol. The C. parapsilosis xyl1 gene was placed under the control of an alcohol dehydrogenase promoter and integrated into the genome of C. tropicalis. The resulting recombinant yeast, C. tropicalis BN-1, showed higher yield and productivity (by 5 and 25%, respectively) than the wild strain and lower production of by-products, thus facilitating the purification process. The XRs partially purified from C. tropicalis BN-1 exhibited dual coenzyme specificity for both NADH and NADPH, indicating the functional expression of the C. parapsilosis xyl1 gene in C. tropicalis BN-1. This is the first report of the cloning of an xyl1 gene encoding an NADH-preferring XR and its functional expression in C. tropicalis, a yeast currently used for industrial production of xylitol.  相似文献   

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Hoyer LL  Fundyga R  Hecht JE  Kapteyn JC  Klis FM  Arnold J 《Genetics》2001,157(4):1555-1567
The ALS (agglutinin-like sequence) gene family of Candida albicans encodes cell-surface glycoproteins implicated in adhesion of the organism to host surfaces. Southern blot analysis with ALS-specific probes suggested the presence of ALS gene families in C. dubliniensis and C. tropicalis; three partial ALS genes were isolated from each organism. Northern blot analysis demonstrated that mechanisms governing expression of ALS genes in C. albicans and C. dubliniensis are different. Western blots with an anti-Als serum showed that cross-reactive proteins are linked by beta 1,6-glucan in the cell wall of each non-albicans Candida, suggesting similar cell wall architecture and conserved processing of Als proteins in these organisms. Although an ALS family is present in each organism, phylogenetic analysis of the C. albicans, C. dubliniensis, and C. tropicalis ALS genes indicated that, within each species, sequence diversification is extensive and unique ALS sequences have arisen. Phylogenetic analysis of the ALS and SAP (secreted aspartyl proteinase) families show that the ALS family is younger than the SAP family. ALS genes in C. albicans, C. dubliniensis, and C. tropicalis tend to be located on chromosomes that also encode genes from the SAP family, yet the two families have unexpectedly different evolutionary histories. Homologous recombination between the tandem repeat sequences present in ALS genes could explain the different histories for co-localized genes in a predominantly clonal organism like C. albicans.  相似文献   

4.
Southern blot analysis under low-stringency conditions using a previously isolated n-alkane-inducible cytochrome P450 (P450alk) gene as a probe revealed the presence of multiple P450alk-related genes in the genome of Candida maltosa. Nine P450alk-related genes (one reported previously and eight in the present report) were isolated from a genomic library constructed from this strain, and these were classified on the basis of sequence similarities into three pairs of putative allelic genes and three nonallelic genes. Two pairs of these alleles were tandemly arranged in the genome. The complete nucleotide sequences of one of these pairs were determined and compared to other members of this P450 family (CYP52) in C. maltosa and C. tropicalis. Northern blot analysis further showed that these genes were regulated by carbon sources. These results provide evidence for a P450alk (CYP52) multigene family in C. maltosa.  相似文献   

5.
The heat shock protein 90 (hsp90) gene sequence is known to be highly conserved across the species barrier. A PCR-based method was thus utilised in an attempt to sequence the Candida tropicalis hsp90 gene. Primers for PCR were designed from conserved regions of the gene, which were identified by comparing the Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Candida albicans hsp90 gene sequences. Different sets of primers were designed to amplify and obtain overlapping DNA sequences of the C tropicalis gene. PCR was carried out on genomic DNA of Candidca tropicalis and the PCR products were cloned into suitable vector molecules for sequencing. In this way, a 2,070-basepair sequence of the C. tropicalis hsp90 gene was obtained. The PCR-based approach proved to be an easier method of obtain the sequence of a highly conserved gene, as compared to more conventional methods.  相似文献   

6.
While the anuran amphibian Xenopus laevis is a widely used vertebrate model system, it is not optimal for genetic manipulations due to its tetraploid genome and long generation time. A current alternative amphibian model system, Xenopus tropicalis, has the advantages of a diploid genome and a much shorter generation time. We undertook a comparative investigation of X. tropicalis egg extracellular matrix glycoproteins in relation to those already characterized in X. laevis. Fertilization methods and isolation of egg extracellular molecules were directly transferable from X. laevis to X. tropicalis. Cross-fertilizations were successful in both directions, indicating similar molecules involved in sperm-egg interactions. Egg envelopes analyzed by SDS-PAGE were found to have almost identical gel patterns, whereas jelly component profiles were similar only for the larger macromolecules (>90 kDa). The cDNA sequences for egg envelope glycoproteins ZPA, ZPB, ZPC, ZPD and ZPAX, and also egg cortical granule lectin involved in the block to polyspermy, were cloned for X. tropicalis and showed a consistent approximately 85% amino acid identity to the X. laevis sequences. Thus, homologous egg extracellular matrix molecules perform the same functions, and the molecular and cellular mechanisms of fertilization in these two species are probably equivalent.  相似文献   

7.
Microarrays have great potential for the study of developmental biology. As a model system Xenopus is well suited for making the most of this potential. However, Xenopus laevis has undergone a genome wide duplication meaning that most genes are represented by two paralogues. This causes a number of problems. Most importantly the presence of duplicated genes mean that a X. laevis microarray will have less or even half the coverage of a similar sized microarray from the closely related but diploid frog Xenopus tropicalis. However, to date, X. laevis is the most commonly used amphibian system for experimental embryology. Therefore, we have tested if a microarray based on sequences from X. tropicalis will work across species using RNA from X. laevis. We produced a pilot oligonucleotide microarray based on sequences from X. tropicalis. The microarray was used to identify genes whose expression levels changed during early X. tropicalis development. The same assay was then carried out using RNA from X. laevis. The cross species experiments gave similar results to those using X. tropicalis RNA. This was true at the whole microarray level and for individual genes, with most genes giving similar results using RNA from X. laevis and X. tropicalis. Furthermore, the overlap in genes identified between a X. laevis and a X. tropicalis set of experiments was only 12% less than the overlap between two sets of X. tropicalis experiments. Therefore researchers can work with X. laevis and still make use of the advantages offered by X. tropicalis microarrays.  相似文献   

8.
Here, we report and characterize deep sequencing data and bioinformatics analysis of small RNAs from Xenopus tropicalis gastrula. A total of 17,553,124 reads with perfect match to the genome derived from 2,616,053 unique sequences were identified. Seventy-seven percent of theses sequences were not found in previous reports from X. tropicalis oocytes and somatic tissues. Bioinformatics analyses indicate that a large fraction of the small RNAs are PIWI-interacting RNAs. Up to 23.9% of small RNAs mapped to transposable elements and 27% to genic regions. Most of abundant transposable derived small RNAs are found in oocyte and gastrula libraries, suggesting that transposon needs to be silenced also during early development. Additionally, miRNAs were identified and many of them are not present in oocytes, suggesting that miRNA expression is stage specific. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first high throughput data release and bioinformatics characterization of small RNAs during Xenopus development.  相似文献   

9.
Hikosaka A  Takaya K  Jinno M  Kawahara A 《FEBS letters》2007,581(16):3013-3018
Small RNAs (miR159-like RNAs) identical to some plant miR159s were found in Xenopus tropicalis miRNA cDNA libraries (30 miRNA families consisting of 75 unique sequences). Preferential expression of this RNA species was found in neural tissues during development. A sequence matching to this RNA species was not found in the 21 available animal's genome databases, but its resembling sequences associated with transposons were found in the X. tropicalis database. A possibility of horizontal transfer of the miR159 genes from plants will be discussed. Expression profiles of other miRNA species at metamorphosis were shown by DNA array and/or Northern hybridization.  相似文献   

10.
HAPPY mapping was designed to pursue the analysis of approximately random HAPloid DNA breakage samples using the PolYmerase chain reaction for mapping genomes. In the present study, we improved the method and integrated two other molecular techniques into the process: whole genome amplification and the Sequenom SNP (single nucleotide polymorphism) genotyping assay in order to facilitate whole genome mapping of X. tropicalis. The former technique amplified enough DNA materials to genotype a large number of markers, while the latter allowed for relatively high throughput marker genotyping with multiplex assays on the HAPPY lines. A total of 58 X. tropicalis genes were genotyped on an initial panel of 383 HAPPY lines, which contributed to formation of a working panel of 146 lines. Further genotyping of 29 markers on the working panel led to construction of a HAPPY map for the X. tropicalis genome. We believe that our improved HAPPY method described in the present study has paved the way for the community to map different genomes with a simple, but powerful approach.  相似文献   

11.
A genomic DNA clone encoding isocitrate lyase, a key enzyme of the glyoxylate cycle and a peroxisomal enzyme of the n-alkane-assimilating yeast Candida tropicalis has been isolated with a cDNA probe from the yeast lambda EMBL library. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the genomic DNA clone disclosed that the region coding isocitrate lyase had a length of 1,650 base pairs, corresponding to 550 amino acids (61,602 Da). RNA blot analysis demonstrated that only one kind of mRNA (2 kb) supposed to be transcribed from this gene was present in the cells. A comparison of the amino acid sequences was made with the isocitrate lyase of castor bean, one of the glyoxysomal enzymes, and the enzyme of E. coli. The isocitrate lyases of C. tropicalis and castor bean had high homology, and the presence of some amino acid stretches conserved in all three enzymes suggests that these might be involved in the catalysis of the common reaction. There was an insertion common to the isocitrate lyases of C. tropicalis and castor bean, which is of interest concerning their evolution. In the C-terminal region, a characteristic sequence similar to that previously proposed as the import signal to peroxisomes was present.  相似文献   

12.
A clone harbouring the genomic DNA sequence for the peroxisomal catalase of an n-alkane-utilizable yeast, Candida tropicalis, has been isolated by the hybrid-selection method and confirmed with a probe of catalase partial cDNA. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the cloned DNA disclosed that the gene fragment coding for catalase had a length of 1455 base pairs (corresponding to 485 amino acids; m = 54937 Da), and that the size of this enzyme was the smallest among all catalases reported hitherto. No intervening sequence was found in this coding region and some portions coincided with the amino acid sequences obtained from the analysis of the purified catalase. The comparison with three peroxisomal catalases from rat liver, bovine liver and human kidney, and one cytosolic catalase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae has revealed that catalase from C. tropicalis was more homologous to the peroxisomal enzymes than to the cytosolic one. C. tropicalis used the codons of the high-expression type. Amino acid residues were all conserved at the active and heme-binding sites. In the N and C-terminal regions there was no characteristic signal sequence or consensus sequence. However, a noticeable region, which can be discriminated between peroxisomal and cytosolic catalases, was proposed.  相似文献   

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The classification of species belonging to the genus Candida Berkhout is problematic. Therefore, we have determined the small ribosomal subunit RNA (srRNA) sequences of the type strains of three human pathogenic Candida species; Candida krusei, C. lusitaniae and C. tropicalis. The srRNA sequences were aligned with published eukaryotic srRNA sequences and evolutionary trees were inferred using a matrix optimization method. An evolutionary tree comprising all available eukaryotic srRNA sequences, including two other pathogenic Candida species, C. albicans and C. glabrata, showed that the yeasts diverge rather late in the course of eukaryote evolution, namely at the same depth as green plants, ciliates and some smaller taxa. The cluster of the higher fungi consists of 10 ascomycetes and ascomycete-like species with the first branches leading to Neurospora crassa, Pneumocystis carinii, Candida lusitaniae and C. krusei, in that order. Next there is a dichotomous divergence leading to a group consisting of Torulaspora delbrueckii, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, C. glabrata and Kluyveromyces lactis and a smaller group comprising C. tropicalis and C. albicans. The divergence pattern obtained on the basis of srRNA sequence data is also compared to various other chemotaxonomic data.  相似文献   

15.
Kallikrein gene families have been identified previously in genomes of the human, the mouse, and the rat, and individual kallikrein-like genes have been found in many more species. This study presents the in silico identification of kallikrein gene families in the recently sequenced genomes of four additional mammalian species, the chimpanzee, the dog, the pig, and the opossum. Phylogenies were constructed with gene sequences from all seven mammalian families, using Bayesian analysis, which clarified the evolutionary relationships between these genes. Individual gene sequences, as well as concatenated constructs of multiple sequences, were used. Fifteen kallikrein genes were located in the chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) genome, while only 14 were identified in the canine (Canis familiaris) genome as no orthologue to human KLK3 was found. Thirteen genes were identified from the pig (Sus scrofa) genome, which lacked homologues to KLK2 and KLK3, and 11 genes, orthologous to human KLK5 through KLK15, were found in the opossum (Monodelphis domestica) genome. No kallikrein genes were identified from the available genome sequences of the chicken (Gallus gallus) or African clawed frog (Xenopus tropicalis). Within the family of kallikreins several subfamilies were suggested by phylogenetic analysis. One consisted of KLK4, KLK5, and KLK14; another of KLK9, KLK11, and KLK15; a third of KLK10 and KLK12; a fourth of KLK6 and KLK13; and finally one of KLK8 and the classical kallikreins (KLK1, KLK2, and KLK3).  相似文献   

16.
A new family, termed TxpB, of DNA transposons belonging to the piggyBac superfamily was found in 3 Xenopus species (Xenopus tropicalis, Xenopus laevis, and Xenopus borealis). Two TxpB subfamilies of Kobuta and Uribo1 were found in all the 3 species, and another subfamily termed Uribo2 was found in X. tropicalis. Molecular phylogenetic analyses of their open reading frames (ORFs) revealed that TxpB transposons have been maintained for over 100 Myr. Both the Uribo1 and the Uribo2 ORFs were present as multiple copies in each genome, and some of them were framed by terminal inverted repeat sequences. In contrast, all the Kobuta ORFs were present as a single copy in each genome and exhibited high evolutionary conservation, suggesting domestication of Kobuta genes by the host. Genomic insertion polymorphisms of the Uribo1 and Uribo2 transposons (nonautonomous type) were observed in a single species of X. tropicalis, indicating recent transposition events. Transfection experiments in cell culture revealed that an expression vector construct for the intact Uribo2 ORF caused precise excision of a nonautonomous Uribo2 element from the target vector construct but that for the Kobuta ORF did not. The present results support our viewpoint that some Uribo2 members are naturally active autonomous transposons, whereas Kobuta members may be domesticated by hosts.  相似文献   

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We have investigated the structure of oocyte and somatic 5S ribosomal RNA and of 5S RNA encoding genes in Xenopus tropicalis. The sequences of the two 5S RNA families differ in four positions, but only one of these substitutions, a C to U transition in position 79 within the internal control region of the corresponding 5S RNA encoding genes, is a distinguishing characteristic of all Xenopus somatic and oocyte 5S RNAs characterized to date, including those from Xenopus laevis and Xenopus borealis. 5S RNA genes in Xenopus tropicalis are organized in clusters of multiple repeats of a 264 base pair unit; the structural and functional organization of the Xenopus tropicalis oocyte 5S gene is similar to the somatic but distinct from the oocyte 5S DNA in Xenopus laevis and Xenopus borealis. A comparative sequence analysis reveals the presence of a strictly conserved pentamer motif AAAGT in the 5'-flanking region of Xenopus 5S genes which we demonstrate in a separate communication to serve as a binding signal for an upstream stimulatory factor.  相似文献   

19.
W W Murray  R A Rachubinski 《Gene》1987,51(2-3):119-128
We report the isolation and nucleotide (nt) sequence determination of a gene encoding peroxisomal fatty acyl-CoA oxidase (AOx) from the yeast Candida tropicalis pK233. The AOx gene contains no intervening sequences and has a single open reading frame of 2127 nt encoding a protein of 708 amino acids (aa), not including the initiator methionine. The Mr of the protein is 79,155. Codon utilization in the gene is not random, with 87.4% of the aa specified by 25 principal codons. The principal codons used in the expression of AOx in C. tropicalis are similar to those used in highly expressed genes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The AOx protein shows a 94.2% homology with POX4 protein of C. tropicalis. One stretch of 36 aa shows no homology between the two proteins.  相似文献   

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