Neurospora crassa mitochondria use a branched electron transport system in which one branch is a conventional cytochrome system and the other is an alternative cyanide-resistant, hydroxamic acid-sensitive oxidase that is induced when the cytochrome system is impaired. We used a monoclonal antibody to the alternative oxidase of the higher plant Sauromatum guttatum to identify a similar set of related polypeptides (Mr, 36,500 and 37,000) that was associated with the alternative oxidase activity of N. crassa mitochondria.These polypeptides were not present constitutively in the mitochondria of a wild-type N. crassa strain, but were produced in high amounts under conditions that induced alternative oxidase activity. Under the same conditions, mutants in the aod-1 gene, with one exception, produced apparently inactive alternative oxidase polypeptides, whereas mutants in the aod-2 gene failed to produce these polypeptides. The latter findings support the hypothesis that aod-1 is a structural gene for the alternative oxidase and that the aod-2 gene encodes a component that is required for induction of alternative oxidase activity. Finally, our results indicate that the alternative oxidase is highly conserved, even between plant and fungal species.
The mitochondria of certain natural isolates of Neurospora contain both the Varkud plasmid, which encodes a reverse transcriptase, and a small unrelated RNA (VS RNA) that performs RNA-mediated self-cleavage and ligation reactions. Here, we show that VS RNA is transcribed from a VS plasmid DNA template by the Neurospora mitochondrial RNA polymerase using a promoter located immediately upstream of the RNA self-cleavage site that generates monomeric transcripts. VS RNA is then reverse transcribed by the Varkud plasmid reverse transcriptase to yield a full-length (-) strand cDNA, a predicted replication intermediate. Combined with previous genetic evidence, our results indicate that the VS plasmid replicates by reverse transcription as a satellite of the Varkud plasmid. This mode of replication, unprecedented for a satellite RNA, likely reflects the promiscuity of the Varkud plasmid reverse transcriptase, which does not require a specific primer to initiate cDNA synthesis. Our findings indicate how primitive reverse transcriptases with similar relaxed specificity could have facilitated the evolution of new retroelements.
The Mauriceville and Varkud plasmids are retroid elements that propagate in the mitochondria of some Neurospora spp. strains. Previous studies of endogenous reactions in ribonucleoprotein particle preparations suggested that the plasmids use a novel mechanism of reverse transcription that involves synthesis of a full-length minus-strand DNA beginning at the 3' end of the plasmid transcript, which has a 3' tRNA-like structure (M. T. R. Kuiper and A. M. Lambowitz, Cell 55:693-704, 1988). In this study, we developed procedures for releasing the MauricevilHe plasmid reverse transcriptase from mitochondrial ribonucleoprotein particles and partially purifying it by heparin-Sepharose chromatography. By using these soluble preparations, we show directly that the Mauricevilie plasmid reverse transcriptase synthesizes full-length cDNA copies of in vitro transcripts beginning at the 3' end and has a preference for transcripts having the 3' tRNA-like structure. Further, unlike retroviral reverse transcriptases, the Mauriceville plasmid reverse transcriptase begins cDNA synthesis directly opposite the 3'-terminal nucleotide of the template RNA. The ability to initiate cDNA synthesis directly at the 3' end of template RNAs may also be relevant to the mechanisms of reverse transcription used by LINEs, group II introns, and other non-long terminal repeat retroid elements.
A 75-kilobase plasmid from Bacillus thuringiensis var. kurstaki (HD-244) was associated with the k-73 type insecticidal crystal protein production by mating into B. cereus and subsequent curing of excess plasmids. This plasmid was partially digested with endonuclease R · Sau 3A and the fragments were cloned into Escherichia coli (HB101) on vector pBR322. Candidate clones were screened for plasmid vectors which contained the expected insert size (at least 3 kilobases) and then with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, using antisera prepared against electrophoretically purified, solubilized insecticidal crystal protein of 130,000 daltons. Several positive clones were isolated and were analyzed for expression, toxicity, and genetic content by restriction enzyme analysis. Electrophoretic transfer blots of proteins from a candidate E. coli clone, analyzed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, demonstrated a predominant cross-reacting protein of about 140,000 daltons. Ouchterlony analysis also showed a single precipitin band. Extensive bioassays with Manduca sexta larvae revealed that the E. coli clones make toxin with a specific activity (50% lethal dose per microgram of cross-reacting protein) equivalent to that of the parental B. thuringiensis strain or a B. cereus trancipient carrying the toxin-encoding, 75-kilobase plasmid.
Neurospora crassa mitochondria use a branched electron transport system in which one branch is a conventional cytochrome system and the other is an alternative cyanide-resistant, hydroxamic acid-sensitive oxidase that is induced when the cytochrome system is impaired. We used a monoclonal antibody to the alternative oxidase of the higher plant Sauromatum guttatum to identify a similar set of related polypeptides (Mr, 36,500 and 37,000) that was associated with the alternative oxidase activity of N. crassa mitochondria. These polypeptides were not present constitutively in the mitochondria of a wild-type N. crassa strain, but were produced in high amounts under conditions that induced alternative oxidase activity. Under the same conditions, mutants in the aod-1 gene, with one exception, produced apparently inactive alternative oxidase polypeptides, whereas mutants in the aod-2 gene failed to produce these polypeptides. The latter findings support the hypothesis that aod-1 is a structural gene for the alternative oxidase and that the aod-2 gene encodes a component that is required for induction of alternative oxidase activity. Finally, our results indicate that the alternative oxidase is highly conserved, even between plant and fungal species.
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