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Mitochondrial minicircles in the free-living bodonid Bodo saltans contain two gRNA gene cassettes and are not found in large networks

Authors :
J. van den Burg
A. de Haan
M. van den Berg
Julius Lukeš
D. Blom
P. Sloof
Rob Benne
Milan Jirku
Other departments
Source :
RNA (New York, N.Y.), 6(1), 121-135. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Publication Year :
2000

Abstract

In trypanosomatids, the majority of the guide (g) RNAs that provide the information for U-insertion/deletion RNA editing are encoded by minicircles that are catenated into large networks. In contrast, in the distantly related cryptobiid Trypanoplasma borreli, gRNA genes appear to reside in large 180-kb noncatenated DNA circles. To shed light on the evolutionary history and function of the minicircle network, we have analyzed minicircle organization in the free-living bodonid Bodo saltans, which is more closely related to trypanosomatids than T. borreli. We identified 1.4-kb circular DNAs as the B. saltans equivalent of minicircles via sequence analysis of 4 complete minicircles, 14 minicircle fragments, and 14 gRNAs. We show that each minicircle harbors two gRNA gene cassettes of opposite polarity residing in variable regions of about 200 nt in otherwise highly conserved molecules. In the conserved region, B. saltans minicircles contain a putative bent helix sequence and a degenerate dodecamer motif (CSB-3). Electron microscopy, sedimentation, and gel electrophoresis analyses showed no evidence for the existence of large minicircle networks in B. saltans, the large majority of the minicircles being present as circular and linear monomers (85-90%) with small amounts of catenated dimers and trimers. Our results provide the first example of a kinetoplastid species with noncatenated, gRNA gene-containing minicircles, which implies that the creation of minicircles and minicircle networks are separate evolutionary events.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13558382
Volume :
6
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
RNA (New York, N.Y.)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....96e15f4b106674416ddcbe579589a8b8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/s1355838200992021