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Molecular Biology and Evolution, Vol 9, 1089-1102, Copyright © 1992 by Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

The 5S ribosomal RNA gene in Pythium species: two different genomic locations

A Belkhiri, J Buchko and GR Klassen
Department of Microbiology, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada.

The 5S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) genes in eukaryotes may occur either interspersed with the other rRNA genes in the ribosomal DNA (rDNA) repeat, or in separate tandem arrays, or dispersed throughout the genome. In Pythium species and in several related Oomycetes, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of the nontranscribed spacer (NTS) region with one primer specific for the 5S gene revealed, with several exceptions, that the 5S rRNA gene was present in the rDNA repeat of those species with filamentous sporangia and was absent from the rDNA repeat of those with globose or unknown sporangia. When present, the gene was located approximately 1 kb downstream of the large-subunit rRNA gene and on the strand opposite that on which the other rRNA genes were located. This was confirmed in P. torulosum by sequencing of the gene and its flanking regions. The 5S rRNA genes of P. ultimum were found in tandem arrays outside the rDNA repeat. Evidence of dispersed 5S rRNA sequences was also observed. For many of the species of Pythium having the 5S gene in the NTS, the region between the large-subunit rRNA gene and the 5S gene was found to have length heterogeneity. Oomycetes related to Pythium were also found to have the 5S gene in the NTS, although sometimes in the opposite orientation. This may mean that the presence of the gene in the NTS is ancestral for the Oomycetes and that the absence of the gene in the NTS in those Pythiums with globose sporangia is due to loss of the gene from the rDNA repeat in an ancestor of this group of species. These results favor the view that 5S rRNA gene linkage to the rRNA cistron existed prior to the unlinked arrangement seen in most plants and animals.
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J. Clin. Microbiol.Home page
A. M. Schurko, L. Mendoza, A. W. A. M. de Cock, J. E. J. Bedard, and G. R. Klassen
Development of a Species-Specific Probe for Pythium insidiosum and the Diagnosis of Pythiosis
J. Clin. Microbiol., June 1, 2004; 42(6): 2411 - 2418.
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