1. An antifreeze glycopeptide gene from the antarctic cod Notothenia coriiceps neglecta encodes a polyprotein of high peptide copy number.
- Author
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Hsiao KC, Cheng CH, Fernandes IE, Detrich HW, and DeVries AL
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Antarctic Regions, Antifreeze Proteins, Base Sequence, Blotting, Northern, Cloning, Molecular, Codon genetics, DNA genetics, Fishes, Freezing, Gene Library, Molecular Sequence Data, Nucleic Acid Hybridization, Oligonucleotide Probes, Protein Biosynthesis, Restriction Mapping, Transcription, Genetic, Genes, Glycoproteins genetics
- Abstract
The antarctic fish Notothenia coriiceps neglecta synthesizes eight antifreeze glycopeptides (AFGP 1-8; Mr 2600-34,000) to avoid freezing in its ice-laden freezing habitat. We report here the sequence of one of its AFGP genes. The structural gene contains 46 tandemly repeated segments, each encoding one AFGP peptide plus a 3-amino acid spacer. Most of the repeats (44/46) code for peptides of AFGP 8; the remaining 2 code for peptides of AFGP 7. At least 2 of the 3 amino acids in the spacers could act as substrate for chymotrypsin-like proteases. The nucleotide sequence between the translation initiation codon (ATG) and the first AFGP-coding segment is G + T-rich and encodes a presumptive 37-residue signal peptide of unusual sequence. Primer extension establishes the transcription start site at nucleotide 43 upstream from ATG. CAAT and TATA boxes begin at nucleotides 53 and 49, respectively, upstream from the transcription start site. The polyadenylylation signal, AATAAA, is located approximately 240 nucleotides downstream from the termination codon. A mRNA (approximately 3 kilobases) was found that matches the size of this AFGP gene. Thus, this AFGP gene encodes a secreted, high-copy-number polyprotein that is processed posttranslationally to produce active AFGPs.
- Published
- 1990
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