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1.
Proteolytic activity is regarded as one of the most important virulence factors of Candida albicans. Several authors recently demonstrated that some karyotypes and genotypes harbouring a group I self-splicing intron (CaLSU) located in the gene encoding the large rRNA subunit showed a high level of proteinase production. The aim of this study was to investigate the correlation between the level of proteinase production and the presence of the CaLSU intron in C. albicans isolates originating from the blood and respiratory tracts (sputum/pharyngeal swabs) of patients with and without oropharyngeal candidosis. The results revealed statistically significant differences in genotype distribution and the level of proteinase production between the C. albicans isolates obtained from blood and from the respiratory tract. Genotype A, without the intron, was prevalent in all groups of strains and its prevalence was higher among isolates from blood (75%) and from patients with candidosis (80%) compared with strains from colonisation (as opposed to infection) (57.8%). Isolates from blood produced significantly less proteinase than isolates from the respiratory tract (p<0.02), and this difference should be attributed to lower proteinase production of genotypes B and C from blood compared with genotypes B and C from the respiratory tract (p<0.01). The higher proteinase production of genotype B than of genotype A was found among respiratory tract isolates only. The presented data indicate that the association between proteinase production and the CaLSU intron depends on the strains' population. Further study is needed on well-defined groups of clinical isolates to elucidate whether the observed diversity in proteinase production plays a role in the selection of strains inducing bloodstream infections.  相似文献   

2.
3.
The catalytic core of the sunY intron of bacteriophage T4   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
M Q Xu  D A Shub 《Gene》1989,82(1):77-82
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4.
5.
In the present study, we determined the sequence of group I self-splicing introns found in the large ribosomal RNA subunit of Candida albicans, Candida stellatoidea and the recently-described species Candida dubliniensis. It was found that both the intron and ribosomal RNA nucleotide sequences are almost perfectly identical between different C. albicans strains as well as between C. albicans and C. stellatoidea strains. Comparisons of ribosomal RNA sequences suggest that local isolates of atypical C. albicans from individuals infected with human immunodeficiency virus can be assigned to the C. dubliniensis species. C. dubliniensis strains also harbor a group I intron in their ribosomal RNA, as observed in about 40% of C. albicans strains and all C. stellatoidea strains. This novel C. dubliniensis group I intron is identical to the C. albicans and C. stellatoidea intron, except for two widely divergent stem-loop regions. Despite these differences, the C. dubliniensis intron possesses self-splicing ability in an in vitro assay. Taken together, these data support the idea that C. albicans and C. stellatoidea should be joined together as variants of the same species while C. dubliniensis is a distinct but closely related microorganism. To our knowledge, the C. albicans and C. dubliniensis introns are the first example of a pair of homologous group I introns differing only by the presence of apparently facultative sequences in some stem-loops suspected to be involved in stabilization of tertiary structure.  相似文献   

6.
Shukla GC  Padgett RA 《Molecular cell》2002,9(5):1145-1150
Both spliceosomal and self-splicing group II introns require the function of similar small, metal binding RNA stem-loop elements located in U6 or U6atac snRNAs of the spliceosome or domain 5 (D5) of group II introns. Here we report that two different D5 elements can functionally replace the U6atac snRNA stem-loop in an in vivo splicing assay. For efficient function in vivo, a single base pair from the upper helical section of the D5 sequence had to be removed. Introducing the equivalent base pair deletion into the D5 element of a group II intron reduced but did not eliminate self-splicing activity. Our results strengthen the case that these RNA elements play similar roles in the catalytic centers of both the spliceosome and a self-splicing ribozyme.  相似文献   

7.
Pentamidine inhibits in vitro splicing of nuclear group I introns from rRNA genes of some pathogenic fungi and is known to inhibit mitochondrial function in yeast. Here we report that pentamidine inhibits the self-splicing of three group I and two group II introns of yeast mitochondria. Comparison of yeast strains with different configurations of mitochondrial introns (12, 5, 4, or 0 introns) revealed that strains with the most introns were the most sensitive to growth inhibition by pentamidine on glycerol medium. Analysis of blots of RNA from yeast strains grown in raffinose medium in the presence or absence of pentamidine revealed that the splicing of seven group I and two group II introns that have intron reading frames was inhibited by the drug to varying extents. Three introns without reading frames were unaffected by the drug in vivo, and two of these were inhibited in vitro, implying that the drug affects splicing by acting directly on RNA in vitro, but on another target in vivo. Because the most sensitive introns in vivo are the ones whose splicing depends on a maturase encoded by the intron reading frames, we tested pentamidine for effects on mitochondrial translation. We found that the drug inhibits mitochondrial but not cytoplasmic translation in cells at concentrations that inhibit mitochondrial intron splicing. Therefore, pentamidine is a potent and specific inhibitor of mitochondrial translation, and this effect explains most or all of its effects on respiratory growth and on in vivo splicing of mitochondrial introns.  相似文献   

8.
9.
We describe the presence and characteristics of two self-splicing group I introns in the sole 23S rRNA gene of Coxiella burnetii. The two group I introns, Cbu.L1917 and Cbu.L1951, are inserted at sites 1917 and 1951 (Escherichia coli numbering), respectively, in the 23S rRNA gene of C. burnetii. Both introns were found to be self-splicing in vivo and in vitro even though the terminal nucleotide of Cbu.L1917 is adenine and not the canonical conserved guanine, termed OmegaG, found in Cbu.L1951 and all other group I introns described to date. Predicted secondary structures for both introns were constructed and revealed that Cbu.L1917 and Cbu.L1951 were group IB2 and group IA3 introns, respectively. We analyzed strains belonging to eight genomic groups of C. burnetii to determine sequence variation and the presence or absence of the elements and found both introns to be highly conserved (>/=99%) among them. Although phylogenetic analysis did not identify the specific identities of donors, it indicates that the introns were likely acquired independently; Cbu.L1917 was acquired from other bacteria like Thermotoga subterranea and Cbu.L1951 from lower eukaryotes like Acanthamoeba castellanii. We also confirmed the fragmented nature of mature 23S rRNA in C. burnetii due to the presence of an intervening sequence. The presence of three selfish elements in C. burnetii's 23S rRNA gene is very unusual for an obligate intracellular bacterium and suggests a recent shift to its current lifestyle from a previous niche with greater opportunities for lateral gene transfer.  相似文献   

10.
A self-splicing RNA excises an intron lariat   总被引:61,自引:0,他引:61  
We have investigated the in vitro self-splicing of a class II mitochondrial intron. A model pre-mRNA containing intron 5 gamma of the oxi 3 gene of yeast mitochondrial DNA undergoes an efficient intramolecular rearrangement reaction in vitro. This reaction proceeds under conditions distinct from those optimal for self-splicing of class I introns, such as the Tetrahymena nuclear rRNA intron. Intron 5 gamma is excised as a nonlinear RNA indistinguishable from the in vivo excised intron product by gel electrophoresis and primer extension analysis. Studies of the in vitro excised intron product strongly indicate that it is a branched RNA with a circular component joined by a linkage other than a 3'-5' phosphodiester. Two other products, the spliced exons and the broken form of the lariat, were also characterized. These results show that the class II intron products are similar to those of nuclear pre-mRNA splicing.  相似文献   

11.
Excised group II introns in yeast mitochondria appear as covalently closed circles under the electron microscope. We show that these circular molecules are branched and resemble the lariats arising through splicing of nuclear pre-mRNAs in yeast and higher eukaryotes. One member of this intron class (aI5c in the gene for cytochrome c oxidase subunit I) is capable of self-splicing in vitro, giving correct exon-exon ligation and resulting in the appearance of both linear and lariat forms of the excised intron. Nuclease digestion of the latter molecules reveals the presence of a complex oligonucleotide with the probable structure AGU, which thus resembles the branch point formed in the spliceosome-dependent reactions undergone by nuclear pre-mRNAs. Unlike group I introns, this group II intron is not demonstrably dependent on GTP for self-splicing and circularization of the isolated, linear intron is not observed. A model accounting for these observations is presented.  相似文献   

12.
The overlapping ND4L and ND5 genes of Neurospora crassa mitochondria are interrupted by one and two intervening sequences, respectively, of about 1,490, 1,408 and 1,135 bp in length. All three intervening sequences are class I introns and as such have the potential to fold into the conserved secondary structure that has been proposed for the majority of fungal mitochondrial introns. They contain long open reading frames (ORFs; from 306 to 425 codons long) that are continuous and in frame with the upstream exon sequences. These ORFs contain the conserved decapeptide-encoding sequences that are characteristic of the ORFs present in most class I introns. Extensive homology exists among the ORFs encoded by the ND4L intron, ND5 intron 1, and the second intron of the N. crassa oli2 gene. Also, internal repeats of about 130 amino acid residues are present twice in each of these three ORFs, suggesting that a duplication event may have occurred in the formation of these ORFs. The ND4L intron shares extensive homology (at the levels of both primary and proposed secondary structures) with the self-splicing intervening sequence present in the Tetrahymena nuclear rRNA gene. This homology includes but is not limited to the core secondary structure, as peripheral structural elements are also conserved in the two introns.  相似文献   

13.
We report a self-splicing intron in bacteriophage SPO1, whose host is the gram-positive Bacillus subtilis. The intron contains all the conserved features of primary sequence and secondary structure previously described for the group IA introns of eukaryotic organelles and the gram-negative bacteriophage T4. The SPO1 intron contains an open reading frame of 522 nucleotides. As in the T4 introns, this open reading frame begins in a region that is looped out of the secondary structure, but ends in a highly conserved region of the intron core. The exons encode SPO1 DNA polymerase, which is highly similar to E. coli DNA polymerase I. The demonstration of self-splicing introns in viruses of both gram-positive and gram-negative eubacteria lends further evidence for their early origin in evolution.  相似文献   

14.
Despite its small size, the 205 nt group I intron from Azoarcus tRNA(Ile) is an exceptionally stable self-splicing RNA. This IC3 class intron retains the conserved secondary structural elements common to group I ribozymes, but lacks several peripheral helices. These features make it an ideal system to establish the conserved chemical basis of group I intron activity. We collected nucleotide analog interference mapping (NAIM) data of the Azoarcus intron using 14 analogs that modified the phosphate backbone, the ribose sugar, or the purine base functional groups. In conjunction with a complete interference set collected on the Tetrahymena group I intron (IC1 class), these data define a "chemical phylogeny" of functional groups that are important for the activity of both introns and that may be common chemical features of group I intron catalysts. The data identify the functional moieties most likely to play a conserved role as ligands for catalytic metal ions, the substrate helix, and the guanosine cofactor. These include backbone functional groups whose nucleotide identity is not conserved, and hence are difficult to identify by standard phylogenetic sequence comparisons. The data suggest that both introns utilize an equivalent set of long range tertiary interactions for 5'-splice site selection between the P1 substrate helix and its receptor in the J4/5 asymmetric bulge, as well as an equivalent set of 2'-OH groups for P1 helix docking into most of the single stranded segment J8/7. However, the Azoarcus intron appears to make an alternative set of interactions at the base of the P1 helix and at the 5'-end of the J8/7. Extensive differences were observed within the intron peripheral domains, particularly in P2 and P8 where the Azoarcus data strongly support the proposed formation of a tetraloop-tetraloop receptor interaction. This chemical phylogeny for group I intron catalysis helps to refine structural models of the RNA active site and identifies functional groups that should be carefully investigated for their role in transition state stabilization.  相似文献   

15.
16.
cyt18-1 (299-9) is a nuclear mutant of Neurospora crassa that has been shown to have a temperature-sensitive defect in splicing the mitochondrial large rRNA intron. In the present work, we investigate the effect of the cyt18-1 mutation on splicing of mitochondrial mRNA introns. Two genes were studied in detail; the cytochrome b (cob) gene, which contains two introns, and a "long form" of the cytochrome oxidase subunit I (coI) gene, which contains four introns. We found that splicing of both cob introns and splicing of at least two of the coI introns are strongly inhibited in the mutant, whereas splicing of coI intron 1, which is excised as a 2.6 X 10(3) base circle, is relatively unaffected. The rRNA intron and both cob introns are group I introns, whereas the circular coI intron may belong to another structural class. Control experiments showed that the degree of inhibition of splicing is greater in the mutant than can be accounted for by severe inhibition of mitochondrial protein synthesis. Finally, experiments in which mutant cells were shifted from 25 degrees C to 37 degrees C showed that splicing of the large rRNA precursor and splicing of the coI mRNA precursor are inhibited with similar kinetics. Considered together, our results suggest that the cyt18 gene encodes a trans-acting component that is required for the splicing of group I mitochondrial DNA introns or some subclass thereof. Since Neurospora cob intron 1 has been shown to be self-splicing in vitro, defective splicing of this intron in cyt18-1 indicates that an essentially RNA-catalyzed splicing reaction must be facilitated by a trans-acting factor, presumably a protein, in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
A novel and only recently recognized class of enzymes is composed of the site-specific endonucleases encoded by some group I introns. We have characterized several aspects of I-Ppo, the endonuclease that mediates the mobility of intron 3 in the ribosomal DNA of Physarum polycephalum. This intron is unique among mobile group I introns in that it is located in nuclear DNA. We found that I-Ppo is encoded by an open reading frame in the 5' half of intron 3, upstream of the sequences required for self-splicing of group I introns. Either of two AUG initiation codons could start this reading frame, one near the beginning of the intron and the other in the upstream exon, leading to predicted polypeptides of 138 and 160 amino acid residues. The longer polypeptide was the major form translated in vitro in a reticulocyte extract. From nuclease assays of proteins synthesized in vitro with partially deleted DNAs, we conclude that both polypeptides possess endonuclease activity. We also have expressed I-Ppo in Escherichia coli, using a bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase expression system. The longer polypeptide also was the predominant form made in this system. It showed enzymatic activity in bacteria in vivo, as demonstrated by the cleavage of a plasmid carrying the target site. Like several other intron-encoded endonucleases, I-Ppo makes a four-base staggered cut in its ribosomal DNA target sequence, very near the site where intron 3 becomes integrated in crosses of intron 3-containing and intron 3-lacking Physarum strains.  相似文献   

18.
We investigated the self-splicing properties of two introns from the bacterium Bacillus anthracis. One intron (B.a.I1) splices poorly in vitro despite having typical structural motifs, while the second (B.a.I2) splices well while having apparently degenerated features. The spliced exons of B.a.I2 were sequenced, and splicing was found to occur at a 3' site shifted one nucleotide from the expected position, thus restoring missing gamma-gamma' and IBS3-EBS3 pairings, but leaving the two conserved exonic ORFs out of frame. Because of the unexpected splice site, the principles for 3' intron definition were examined, which showed that the 3' splice site is flexible but contingent on gamma-gamma' and IBS3-EBS3 pairings, and can be as far away as four nucleotides from the wild-type site. Surprisingly, alternative splicing occurs at position +4 for wild-type B.a.I2 intron, both in vitro and in vivo, and the alternative event fuses the two conserved exon ORFs, presumably leading to translation of the downstream ORF. The finding suggests that the structural irregularities of B.a.I2 may be an adaptation to facilitate gene expression in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
In eukaryotes, introns are located in nuclear and organelle genes from several kingdoms. Large introns (up to 5 kbp) are frequent in mitochondrial genomes of plant and fungi but scarce in Metazoa, even if these organisms are grouped with fungi among the Opisthokonts. Mitochondrial introns are classified in two groups (I and II) according to their RNA secondary structure involved in the intron self-splicing mechanism. Most of these mitochondrial group I introns carry a "Homing Endonuclease Gene" (heg) encoding a DNA endonuclease acting in transfer and site-specific integration ("homing") and allowing intron spreading and gain after lateral transfer even between species from different kingdoms. Opposed to this gain mechanism, is another which implies that introns, which would have been abundant in the ancestral genes, would mainly evolve by loss. The importance of both mechanisms (loss and gain) is matter of debate. Here we report the sequence of the cox1 gene of the button mushroom Agaricus bisporus, the most widely cultivated mushroom in the world. This gene is both the longest mitochondrial gene (29,902 nt) and the largest group I intron reservoir reported to date with 18 group I and 1 group II. An exhaustive analysis of the group I introns available in cox1 genes shows that they are mobile genetic elements whose numerous events of loss and gain by lateral transfer combine to explain their wide and patchy distribution extending over several kingdoms. An overview of intron distribution, together with the high frequency of eroded heg, suggests that they are evolving towards loss. In this landscape of eroded and lost intron sequences, the A. bisporus cox1 gene exhibits a peculiar dynamics of intron keeping and catching, leading to the largest collection of mitochondrial group I introns reported to date in a Eukaryote.  相似文献   

20.
The self-splicing intron ribozymes have been regarded as primitive forms of the splicing machinery for eukaryotic pre-mRNAs. The splicing activity of group I self-splicing introns is dependent on an absolutely conserved and exceptionally densely packed core region composed of two helical domains, P3-P7 and P4-P6, that are connected rigidly via base triples. Here we show that a mutant group I intron ribozyme lacking both the P4-P6 domain and the base triples can perform the phosphoester transfer reactions required for splicing at both the 5' and 3' splice sites, demonstrating that the elements required for splicing are concentrated in the stacked helical P3-P7 domain. This finding establishes that the conserved core of the intron consists of two physically and functionally separable components, and we present a model showing the architecture of a prototype of this class of intron and the course of its molecular evolution.  相似文献   

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