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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 540

Ziaie, Z. and Suyama, Y.; The cytochrome oxidase subunit I gene of Tetrahymena: a 57 amino acid NH2-terminal extension and a 108 amino acid insert. Curr.Genet. 12:357-368, 1987

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The gene sequence for cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) in the ciliate Tetrahymena mitochondrial DNA has been determined and shown to be coded by the same strand as codes the genes (in order) for 14S rRNA, tRNA(trp), tRNA(glu), 21S rRNA, tRNA(leu) and tRNA(met). The predicted protein has 698 amino acids, including an NH2-terminal 57 amino acid extension and a 108 amino acid insert originally found in Paramecium COI. These extension and insert segments are not highly hydrophobic but are relatively rich in lysine, arginine and serine. In analogy with the presequence of nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins, they might function as a transmembrane signal. The remaining polypeptide segments show a hydrophobicity characteristic of membrane spanning proteins. TCOI shows a 64% amino acid identity with Paramecium COI but less than a 38% amino acid conservation with human COI. The Tetrahymena mitochondrial code is analogous with the mammalian mitochondrial code; but differs from the Tetrahymena nuclear genetic code; TGA is exclusively translated as tryptophan; ATA is used as an initiation codon probably for methionine, and TAA as a stop codon; the arginine codons (CGN) are not used. The use of the leucine codon TTA in TCOI is contradictory to the codon recognition pattern previously obtained from the isolated tRNA(leu) isoacceptors recognizing only the CUN codons, but consistent with the tRNA(leu) (anticodon UAA) gene encoded in the genome. The reason for this inconsistency has not been resolved.