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Molecular and Cellular Biology, December 1998, p. 7521-7527, Vol. 18, No. 12
0270-7306/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Insertional Editing of Mitochondrial tRNAs of Physarum
polycephalum and Didymium nigripes
Travis
Antes,
Heba
Costandy,
Ratha
Mahendran,
Matthew
Spottswood, and
Dennis
Miller*
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, The
University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, Texas 75080
Received 8 June 1998/Returned for modification 27 July
1998/Accepted 16 August 1998
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ABSTRACT |
tRNAs encoded on the mitochondrial DNA of Physarum
polycephalum and Didymium nigripes require
insertional editing for their maturation. Editing consists of the
specific insertion of a single cytidine or uridine relative to the
mitochondrial DNA sequence encoding the tRNA. Editing sites are at 14 different locations in nine tRNAs. Cytidine insertion sites can be
located in any of the four stems of the tRNA cloverleaf and usually
create a G · C base pair. Uridine insertions have been identified
in the T loop of tRNALys from Didymium and
tRNAGlu from Physarum. In both tRNAs, the
insertion creates the GUUC sequence, which is converted to GT
C (
= pseudouridine) in most tRNAs. This type of tRNA editing is different
from other, previously described types of tRNA editing and
resembles the mRNA and rRNA editing in Physarum and
Didymium. Analogous tRNAs in
Physarum and Didymium have editing
sites at different locations, indicating that editing sites have
been lost, gained, or both since the divergence of
Physarum and Didymium. Although cDNAs derived
from single tRNAs are generally fully edited, cDNAs derived
from unprocessed polycistronic tRNA precursors often lack some of the
editing site insertions. This enrichment of partially edited sequences
in unprocessed tRNAs may indicate that editing is required for tRNA
processing or at least that RNA editing occurs as an early event in
tRNA synthesis.
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INTRODUCTION |
RNA editing has been shown to be an
obligatory step in the gene expression of a number of organisms
(26). The most extensively edited RNAs identified to
date are produced in mitochondria or chloroplasts. In trypanosome
mitochondria, uridines are inserted or deleted in mRNAs
(28), and in the mitochondria of the acellular slime
mold Physarum polycephalum, cytidines (and occasionally other nucleotides) are inserted in mRNA (6, 13, 20-22)
or rRNAs (14). In mitochondria and chloroplasts of plants,
some cytidine and uridine residues in RNA are converted by nucleotide modification to uridine and cytidine, respectively (15).
Nucleotide modification in tRNAs has been known for decades
(3). Generally, this consists of posttranscriptional
modification of existing nucleotides but in the case of the Q base
modification may also include the exchange of bases between nucleotides
by transglycosylation (23). Usually, conventional
ribonucleotides are converted to unconventional ribonucleotides. In
a few instances, a conventional nucleotide has been converted to one of
the other conventional ribonucleotides, and this has been termed tRNA
editing. At least five different types of tRNA editing have been
identified, all in mitochondria. Cytidine-to-uridine conversion has
been observed in mitochondrial tRNAPhe and
tRNACys of angiosperms (2, 17) and mitochondrial
tRNAHis of a gymnosperm (18). These editing
sites are located in the acceptor or anticodon stems of the
tRNA and create A · U base pairs. Another cytidine-to-uridine
conversion has been identified in the anticodon of the
tRNAAsp of marsupials (7). This conversion
changes the 5'-GCC-3' anticodon to 5'-GUC-3', allowing the tRNA to
recognize aspartic acid codons and to be acylated with aspartic acid
(4).
In the mitochondria of the protist Acanthamoeba castellanii
(5, 11, 12) and the fungus Spizellomyces
punctatus (10), base substitutions occur in the first
three nucleotides at the 5' end of the tRNAs, creating conventional
base pairs in the acceptor stem. Generally, G or A is substituted for
the U, A, or C inferred from the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)
sequence. In the mitochondria of snails (32), squid
(29), and chickens (34), the 3' ends of some
tRNAs have base substitutions relative to the mtDNA sequence. These
tRNAs are produced from the upstream gene of overlapping tRNA genes and
have A substitutions. These tRNAs are thought to be truncated by 5'
processing of the downstream overlapping tRNA with subsequent oligo(A)
addition to the 3' end, which is terminated by CCA addition to produce
mature tRNAs with 1 to 5 A · U bp at the end of the acceptor stem.
A similar type of base substitution occurs in mitochondrial
tRNASer of the platypus, in which 3 of the 4 nucleotides at
the 3' end of the tRNA are substituted relative to the mtDNA sequence
(33). However, in this case the substituted nucleotides are
not all adenosines.
Here we report the identification and characterization of
insertional editing in tRNAs of P. polycephalum and
Didymium nigripes. These tRNAs have nucleotide insertions of
cytidine or uridine relative to the mtDNA genes encoding them.
These insertions create classical base pairing or conserved
nucleotides in the tRNAs that are not predicted from the DNA
sequence. cDNAs corresponding to unprocessed polycistronic
tRNAs generally lack many of the nucleotide insertions at the
editing sites.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell cultures and nucleic acid preparation.
P.
polycephalum M3C was cultured and mitochondrial nucleic acids were
prepared essentially as described by Mahendran et al. (14).
D. nigripes (ATCC 28363) was cultured as macroplasmodia on
half-strength cornmeal agar plates supplemented with approximately 1 g of oat flakes. Cultures were grown for 9 days at 27°C in the dark. D. nigripes was harvested by gently scraping the
macroplasmodium from the surfaces of eight agar plates in the presence
of 2 ml of diethylpyrocarbonate-treated BEST (0.1% bovine serum
albumin, 60 mM EDTA, 300 mM sucrose, 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5) per plate. The plasmodium was pelleted by centrifugation at 8,000 × g for 10 min at 4°C, and the supernatant fluid was
discarded. The pellets were resuspended in BEST containing 2% sodium
dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and lysed with vortexing. A cleared lysate was
produced by centrifugation at 8,000 × g for 10 min at
4°C. Lysis of the pellet was repeated, and the resulting cleared
lysate was pooled with the initial cleared lysate. The pooled lysates
were extracted three times with a 1:1 mixture of phenol-chloroform, and
nucleic acids were precipitated with 0.5 M sodium acetate (pH 7.8) and ethanol overnight at
20°C.
Northern blot analysis.
Isolation of RNA from
Physarum mitochondria was performed as detailed in the work
of Mahendran et al. (14). Approximately 20 µg of
mitochondrial RNA was separated in either 1.5 or 2% agarose-8 M
urea-1× TPE (40 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.8], 36 mM
NaH2PO4, 1 mM EDTA) gels and transferred to
diazobenzyloxymethyl-cellulose filters overnight by protocols from the
work of Alwine et al. (1). The filters were cut into strips
and prehybridized at 42°C for 14 h in 5× SSC (1× SSC is 0.15 M
NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate)-50% formamide-1× Denhardt's
buffer-50 mM sodium phosphate (pH 7.4)-0.1% SDS-25 mg of sheared
calf thymus DNA per ml. Probes for hybridization were subclones into
pUC18 (New England Biolabs) of restriction fragments of p
m1234, a
10-kb XbaI clone of Physarum mtDNA
(9). Probe 1 is a subclone containing a 650-bp
HindIII/HindIII fragment which encodes
the 5' end of the mitochondrial large-subunit rRNA. Probe 2 is a
2.5-kb AvaI/HindIII fragment which contains
the entire coding region for the mitochondrial small-subunit rRNA.
Probe 3 is a 0.4-kb EcoRI/AvaI fragment which has
sequences corresponding to three mitochondrial tRNAs (Met2, Lys,
and Pro). The three probes were labeled separately by nick translation
(Gibco BRL) in the presence of 50 µCi of [
-32P]dATP
(ICN). In situ hybridization was performed in fresh hybridization solution at 42°C for 16 h with 3 × 106 cpm per
filter strip. After hybridization, the filter strips were washed twice
in 2× SSC-20 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.4)-0.1% SDS at 25°C
and twice in 0.1× SSC-1 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.4)-0.005%
SDS at 42°C. Hybridization patterns were visualized by autoradiography.
Oligonucleotide primers and primer extension.
The
oligonucleotide primers used in the generation of DNA and cDNA
amplification products are as
follows: Phy-Met1-5'Eco, 5'-GGAATTCGTTCTATAGTTTAGTGG-3'; Phy-Met1-3'Xba, 5'GCTCTAGAGTAGAATCGAACTACCG-3'; Phy-Glu-5'Eco,
5'-GGAATTCGCCCCTTTCGTCTAGTGG-3'; Phy-Glu-3'Xba,
5'-GCTCTAGAGCCCCTTGAGAGAATC-3'; Phy-Lys-5'Eco, 5'-GGAATTCTGGCTCGTAGCATAAATAG-3'; Phy-Lys-3'Bam,
5'-CGGGATCCTTGGCTCCACAGGACTTGC-3'; Phy-Pro-5'Eco,
5'-GGAATTCTCGGAGCGTAGCT-3'; Phy-Pro-3'Bam,
5'-CGGGATCCAAGATTTGAACTCGC-3'; Phy-Pro-DSBam,
5'-CGGGATCCTAAAACCTAGAGTTCTG-3'; Did-Lys-3'Bam, 5'-CGGGATCCATGGCACCATGGG-3'; Did-Pro-5'Eco,
5'-GGAATTCACGGGGGTAGCTC-3'; Did-Lys-5'Eco,
5'-GGAATTCTGGTACGTAGCATAACTGG-3'; Did-Met2-5'Eco, 5'-GGAATTCGGGTTGGTGTAATTGG-3'; Did-Met2-3'Bam,
5'-CGGGATCCTGGTGGGGGGTTT-3'; SSU-3'Eco,
5'-GGAATTCGAAYCTGYKGYTGGA-3' (Y = C + T; K = T + G).
The primers designated with the prefix Phy- were synthesized with an
ABI 381A DNA synthesizer. All other primers were commercially synthesized (Gibco BRL). Nucleic acids isolated from either
Physarum or Didymium were treated with 2 U of
RNase-free RQ1 DNase I (Promega) in 40 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.9)-10
mM NaCl-6 mM MgCl2-10 mM CaCl2 in the
presence of 1 U of Inhibit-ACE (5Prime-3Prime, Inc.) for 30 min
at 37°C. The RNA was recovered through three extractions with a 1:1
mixture of phenol-chloroform and precipitated with 0.5 M sodium acetate
(pH 7.8) and ethanol at
20°C for 15 min. Approximately 15 µg of
RNA was hybridized with 1 µg of a specific oligonucleotide primer in
250 mM KCl-10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.3), heated to 80°C, and slowly
cooled to 45°C over the course of 30 min. After annealing, the
primer-RNA hybrid was precipitated with 0.5 M sodium acetate and
ethanol. The RNA-primer pellet was resuspended in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH
8.3)-40 mM KCl-10 mM dithiothreitol-7 mM MgCl2-0.1 mg
of bovine serum albumin per ml-25 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphates-1
U of Inhibit-ACE to a final volume of 50 µl. The primer was extended with 200 U of Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase (Promega) for 45 min at 37°C, and the RNA was removed by treatment with DNase-free RNase A (Sigma) for 15 min at 37°C. cDNAs were recovered by three phenol-chloroform extractions and precipitated with
ethanol in 2.5 M ammonium acetate.
PCR amplification, cloning, and sequence analysis.
Double-stranded cDNAs were produced by the method of Saiki et al.
(25). The amplification was performed in Taq
buffer (50 mM KCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.3], 2.5 mM MgCl2,
25 µM deoxynucleoside triphosphates, 0.1% [wt/vol] gelatin)
with 1 µg of the appropriate 5'-end primer and 2.5 U of
Taq DNA polymerase (Fisher Biotech). The thermal cycle
regimen consisted of 94°C for 1 min, 55°C for 2 min, and 72°C for
3 min for 30 cycles. During the final cycle, an extension of 10 min at
72°C was performed and the reaction products were slowly cooled to
4°C for complete annealing. The resulting PCR amplification products
were cloned into pUC18 (New England Biolabs) with the appropriate
restriction enzymes for the recognition site added to a given
oligonucleotide primer tail and ligated with pUC18 in 30 mM Tris-HCl
(pH 7.8)-10 mM dithiothreitol-10 mM MgCl2-10 mM ATP with
3 U of T4 DNA ligase (Promega) at 16°C for 18 h. The ligase
reaction was precipitated with 0.5 M sodium acetate and ethanol. An
aliquot was used to transform Escherichia coli (XL1-Blue;
Stratagene), and recombinant DNA clones were identified and isolated by
conventional methods. Clones of interest were subjected to sequence
analysis by typical dideoxynucleotide sequencing methods and reagents
supplied with the Sequenase kit (Amersham).
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The mtDNA sequences
of the tRNA genes and their flanking sequences from P. polycephalum and D. nigripes which have been
annotated with editing site locations have been submitted to GenBank
under accession no. AF059032, AF059033, and AF059034.
 |
RESULTS |
tRNA editing in P. polycephalum.
During sequence
analysis of the rRNA-encoding region of the mtDNA of P. polycephalum, sequences which could potentially encode tRNAs
were identified. These tRNAs were tentatively identified as
tRNAGlu, tRNA1Met,
tRNA2Met, tRNALys, and
tRNAPro on the basis of their potential anticodons,
assuming a classical genetic code and classical codon-anticodon
interactions. The potential genes for tRNAGlu and
tRNA1Met were located upstream of the gene for the
large-subunit rRNA, were separated by 5 bp, and were encoded by the
strand opposite to that encoding the rRNAs. The genes for
tRNA2Met, tRNALys, and
tRNAPro were located downstream of the
small-subunit rRNA, were separated by 19 and 18 bp, respectively,
and were encoded from the same strand as the rRNAs (Fig.
1A).

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FIG. 1.
(A) Location on the mtDNA of tRNA genes relative to
the large (LSU)- and small (SSU)-subunit rRNA genes. tRNA genes
are designated by the single-letter code for their cognate amino acid.
Arrows indicate the direction of transcription of these genes. The
lines labeled 1, 2, and 3 indicate the location and extent of
hybridization probes used in Northern blots. (B) Northern blot of
Physarum mitochondrial RNA (mtRNA). Mitochondrial RNA
was separated by agarose-urea gel electrophoresis and transferred in
situ to diazobenzyloxymethyl-paper. Equivalent strips were
hybridized with probes 1, 2, and 3 (A). The detected RNAs are the
mitochondrial large-subunit rRNA (lane 1), the mitochondrial
small-subunit rRNA (lane 2), and tRNAs (lane 3).
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To determine if these sequences were transcribed as
tRNA-sized RNAs, Northern blots of mitochondrial RNA
were probed with
mtDNA sequences specific for the tRNA
sequences. tRNA-sized transcripts
were detected by
using a probe for tRNA
2Met,
tRNA
Lys, and tRNA
Pro (Fig.
1B) and a
probe for tRNA
1Met and tRNA
Glu
(data not shown). Fragments from other regions of the mtDNA did
not
detect tRNA-sized transcripts (data not
shown).
The secondary structure inferred from the mtDNA sequences
was consistent with the classical cloverleaf structure associated
with
tRNAs. However, certain conserved features associated with
most
tRNAs were missing in four of the five sequences (Fig.
2).
In
tRNA
Glu, the highly conserved GTTC motif was absent and
base-pairing
opportunities were absent in the acceptor stem of
tRNA
Pro and tRNA
Glu, in the
dihydrouridine (DHU) stem of tRNA
Pro, in the
anticodon stem of tRNA
1Met and
tRNA
Lys, and in the GT

C stem of
tRNA
1Met.

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FIG. 2.
Secondary structure of tRNAs deduced from the
sequence of cDNAs. Cloverleaf structures of analogous
mitochondrial tRNAs from Physarum and
Didymium are compared. Analogous tRNA pairs are labeled
with their cognate amino acid based on the tRNA anticodon.
Nucleotides inserted in the tRNAs relative to their mtDNA sequence
are indicated by arrows. Locations in which the exact site of the
insertion is ambiguous due to cytidine insertions next to encoded
cytidines or uridine insertions next to encoded uridines are indicated
by dotted lines. Nucleotides in Watson-Crick base pairs are connected
by a dash, nucleotides in GU wobble base pairs are connected by a
closed dot, and nucleotides in other base pairs are connected with an
open dot. Some of the sequences for the cloverleaf structures for
tRNA1Met and tRNAPro from
Didymium are not shown since they were derived from the
primer and not from the mtDNA or tRNA template.
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In order to determine the sequence of the tRNAs produced from the
mtDNA, primers complementary to the 3' ends of the tRNA
were
synthesized and were extended on an RNA template with reverse
transcriptase. cDNAs produced from the tRNAs were amplified by
PCR
with the primer used for cDNA synthesis and a primer with
a sequence
analogous to the 5' end of the tRNA. Primer pairs were
used to
amplify cDNAs corresponding to tRNA
1Met,
tRNA
Glu, tRNA
Lys, and
tRNA
Pro. RNA-specific amplification products produced
in this way were
cloned in the plasmid pUC18. The inserts of plasmids
corresponding
to two or more independent clones of each amplification
product
were sequenced and compared to the mtDNA sequence. Differences
between cDNA and mtDNA sequences corresponding to RNA editing
sites
were identified in each case (Fig.
2). Both
tRNA
1Met and tRNA
Lys had a single
cytidine insertion in the anticodon stem, creating
a G · C base
pair. tRNA
Pro had a single cytidine insertion in the
DHU stem, which also created
a G · C base pair.
tRNA
Glu had a single uridine insertion in the GT

C
loop, creating the
highly conserved GUUC motif that is modified to
GT

C in most
tRNAs.
Because primers corresponding to the 5' and 3' ends of the tRNAs
were used for amplification of cDNAs, editing sites at the
ends of the
tRNAs could not be detected by this approach. To identify
editing
sites at the ends of tRNAs, primer pairs which would selectively
amplify unprocessed tRNA precursors were chosen for cDNA
amplification.
The Met1-5' primer was used with the Glu-3' primer to
amplify
the unprocessed dicistronic tRNA precursor for
tRNA
1Met-tRNA
Glu, and the Lys-5'
primer was used with a primer (Pro-DS) located
downstream of the
tRNA
Pro gene to amplify the unprocessed dicistronic
tRNA precursor for
tRNA
Lys-tRNA
Pro.
cDNAs amplified by using these primer pairs were cloned, sequenced,
and
compared with the mtDNA sequence. This approach revealed that
tRNA
Glu, tRNA
1Met, and
tRNA
Pro each had an additional editing site.
tRNA
Glu had a cytidine insertion in the acceptor stem
next to three other
cytidines, producing a total of four consecutive
C · G base pairs
in the acceptor stem. tRNA
1Met
had an additional cytidine insertion creating a G · C base pair
in
the GT

C stem, and tRNA
Pro had an additional cytidine
insertion creating a G · C base pair
in the DHU
stem.
In all, seven editing sites were identified in the four tRNAs
examined, four sites in
tRNA
1Met-tRNA
Glu and three sites in
tRNA
Lys-tRNA
Pro. The distance between
the sites in these two groups averaged
43.4 nucleotides, about the same
as the average distance between
editing sites in the mitochondrial
small-subunit rRNA (
14).
As with the rRNA editing
sites, the distance ranged between 74
and 17 nucleotides, the latter
being the approximate distance
between editing sites in mRNA (
6,
13,
20-22).
In contrast to the amplification products corresponding to a single
tRNA, which in every case had a nucleotide inserted at
a potential
editing site, cDNAs corresponding to unprocessed dicistronic
tRNA
precursors lacked insertions at potential editing sites at
a high
frequency. Analysis of 30 independent clones of
tRNA
1Met-tRNA
Glu indicated that the
majority of the amplification products were
unedited at all four
potential editing sites. However, 7 of the
15 possible patterns of
insertions at editing sites were observed
(Table
1). These patterns were inconsistent with
a single linear
order of nucleotide insertions at editing sites.
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TABLE 1.
Patterns of nucleotide insertions at editing sites
in dicistronic RNAs from Physarum mitochondria
containing tRNA1Met and tRNAGlu
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Likewise, cDNAs corresponding to partially edited RNAs were observed
when tRNA
Lys-tRNA
Pro amplification
products were selected. Again, many (9 of 20) of
these amplification
products lacked insertions at all three potential
editing sites. Five
of the seven possible patterns of insertions
in the three potential
editing sites were observed (Table
2),
and these patterns were also inconsistent with a single linear
order of
nucleotide insertion at editing sites.
tRNA editing in D. nigripes.
D.
nigripes is a member of the Myxomycota and is classified in the
same order (Physarales) as Physarum but in a different family (Didymiaceae). Comparison of the sequences of the nuclear large-subunit rRNAs of Physarum and Didymium
indicates that they are related but diverged about 400 to 500 million
years ago (8). We wished to determine whether the
organization of the rRNA and tRNA genes is conserved on the
mtDNA of Didymium, whether the tRNAs would require
editing for their maturation, and, if editing was required, whether the
sites of editing would be conserved in the analogous tRNAs. Since
the sequence and organization of the mtDNA of D. nigripes are not known, primers used to amplify portions of the
Physarum mtDNA were used in an attempt to amplify D. nigripes mtDNA. A 386-bp amplification product was
produced from D. nigripes DNA by using the 3' primer
for Physarum tRNAPro (Pro-3') and a primer
which hybridizes to a conserved portion of the 3' end of the
small-subunit rRNA gene of Physarum (SSU-3'). This
amplification product was cloned in plasmid pUC18 and sequenced. Its
sequence revealed that three tRNA genes analogous to those in
Physarum mtDNA were also located in the same order
downstream of the small-subunit rRNA gene. Although the anticodon
and the potential for a general cloverleaf structure were conserved, a number of differences were observed between the primary sequences of
the tRNA genes (Fig. 2). The intergenic region between tRNAs and the rRNA was even less conserved (Fig.
3). The primers for the
tRNA1Met gene of Physarum produced an
amplification product from D. nigripes DNA, indicating
that the analogous gene was present in Didymium. Primers for
the tRNAGlu gene did not produce amplification products
from Didymium DNA.

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FIG. 3.
Alignment of the regions of the mtDNA from
Physarum and Didymium that encode analogous
tRNAs. Vertical bars connect identical nucleotides in the
alignment. Sequences encoding mature tRNAs are underlined and
labeled with the single-letter code for their cognate amino acid. C's
or T's displaced from the sequence indicate the sites of insertions of
cytidines or thymidines, respectively, in the cDNAs of the tRNAs.
The top line is the sequence from Physarum mtDNA; the bottom
line is the analogous region of Didymium mtDNA. (A)
Sequences flanking the tRNA1Met gene. (B) Sequences
downstream of the small-subunit rRNA gene.
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To determine whether RNA editing was necessary for the maturation of
these tRNAs, cDNAs were synthesized on
D. nigripes RNA
templates and amplified by PCR. New
primers (Did-Met2-5', Did-Met2-3',
Did-Lys-5', Did-Lys-3',
and Did-Pro-5') specific for
D. nigripes were
synthesized based on the sequence of the 386-bp
Didymium amplification product and used in the amplification. cDNA amplification
products were produced from all primer combinations except those
which included the SSU-3' primers, indicating that either these
tRNAs are not cotranscribed with the rRNA or that
rRNA-tRNA processing
is very
rapid.
Sequence analysis of these cDNA amplification products revealed seven
editing sites in the mitochondrial tRNAs of
Didymium.
While the insertions were single cytidines and uridines as in
Physarum, with one exception, the location of these sites
differed
from their location in the analogous genes of
Physarum. All of
the editing sites in
Didymium
corresponded to existing nucleotides
encoded by the mtDNA in
Physarum, and editing sites in
Physarum corresponded to existing nucleotides in the mtDNA sequence of
D. nigripes (Fig.
2). Two sites in
tRNA
Lys and one site in tRNA
Pro were
cytidine insertions in the acceptor stems. In the case of
tRNA
Lys, these insertions created G · C base pairs;
in the case of tRNA
Pro, base pairing could not be
determined since the potential G nucleotide
was covered by the
amplification primer. Another C insertion created
a
G · C base pair in the GT

C arm of tRNA
2Met.
A second cytidine insertion was located in the anticodon
loop
of tRNA
2Met, and a uridine insertion was
located in the GT

C loop of tRNA
Lys, creating the
conserved 5'-GUUC-3' motif. The tRNA
1Met in
D. nigripes had a single cytidine insertion at the site
analogous
to the position of the cytidine insertion in
Physarum tRNA
1Met although the sequences
of the tRNAs differed at other
positions.
The spacing of editing sites in cDNAs corresponding to the unprocessed
tRNA
2Met-tRNA
Lys-tRNA
Pro
precursor was similar to that found for mRNA editing in
Physarum.
The average spacing between editing sites was
about 27 nucleotides
with a standard deviation of about 14 nucleotides.
As with
Physarum,
cDNAs corresponding to unprocessed,
polycistronic tRNA precursors
lacked insertions at some of
the editing sites which invariably
had insertions in single tRNA
amplification products. The seven
different patterns of insertion at
editing sites for seven dicistronic
and four tricistronic transcripts
are shown in Table
3. In contrast
to
Physarum, none of the polycistronic cDNAs from
Didymium lacked
insertions at all of the editing sites. As
with
Physarum, no linear
order of insertions was consistent
with the insertion pattern
of all of the cDNAs.
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TABLE 3.
Patterns of nucleotide insertions at editing sites
in polycistronic RNAs from Didymium mitochondria
containing tRNA2Met, tRNALys,
or tRNAPro
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 |
DISCUSSION |
We have identified 14 insertional editing sites in nine tRNAs
of P. polycephalum and D. nigripes. These
insertions create features in the tRNAs that increase their
similarity to nearly all other tRNAs, i.e., the proper number of
base pairs in the stems of the cloverleaf secondary structure and
conserved motifs such as the GUUC sequence in the GT
C loop and the
conserved pyrimidine at position 32 of the anticodon loop. After
editing, these tRNAs have most of the features of the conventional
tRNA cloverleaf, although some unusual features still exist.
One unique feature of all of the tRNAs except
tRNAPro and tRNA1Met of
Physarum is the potential for a non-Watson-Crick base pair at the top of the anticodon stem (position 27:43). Eight different base
pairs exist in this position in the nine tRNAs. While
tRNAPro and tRNA1Met of
Physarum have a U · A base pair and
tRNAPro of Didymium has a C · G base
pair at this position, the other tRNAs have non-Watson-Crick base
pairings: U · G in tRNALys of Didymium,
A · C in tRNALys of Physarum, C · A
in tRNA2Met of Physarum, G · A in
tRNA2Met of Didymium, A · A in
tRNA1Met of Didymium, and U · U in
tRNAGlu of Physarum. Another unusual feature
of tRNA1Met of both organisms is the potential for
a U · U base pair at the central base pair (position 29:41) of the
anticodon stem. This base alignment has also been observed in the
anticodon stem of tRNAIle and tRNACys
of Oenothera mitochondria (2). Also, the
conserved A at position 21 is a C in tRNA2Met of
Physarum, and the conserved purine at position 9 is a
cytidine in tRNAGlu of Physarum. The first
base pair of the acceptor stem (position 1:72) of
tRNA1Met (C · C) and
tRNA2Met (U · C) of Physarum is not
a Watson-Crick base pair, but there is a precedent for this in the
initiator tRNAMet of some prokaryotes and organelles
(27). A G · G pairing is located at position 7:66 at the
base of the acceptor stem of tRNALys in
Physarum. This potential base pairing is predicted from the sequence of the mtDNA in Didymium as well but is
corrected by the insertion of two cytidines in the acceptor stem of the tRNA.
The tRNA editing of Physarum and Didymium
mitochondria differs in its features from any other tRNA editing
described to date. It is the first example of single nucleotide
insertions in tRNA relative to the mtDNA sequence. Although
it differs from other tRNA editing, it has many of the
features associated with the editing identified in mRNA and rRNA of
P. polycephalum (6, 13, 14, 20-22). Most of
the editing sites (12 of 14) have a single cytidine insertion, while a
few (2 of 14) have a single uridine insertion. As with
rRNA and mRNA, an unusually large number of cytidine insertions (6 of 12) could follow purine-pyrimidine dinucleotides. (Ambiguity arises
from the fact that some cytidine insertions are next to a
cytidine encoded by mtDNA.) However, four cytidine insertions
follow purine-purine dinucleotides and two follow
pyrimidine-pyrimidine dinucleotides. Also, the spacing of the
insertions is similar to that observed in rRNA and mRNA of
Physarum. Overall, the average spacing between editing sites in unprocessed tRNA precursors is about 35 nucleotides and
ranges from 10 to 74 nucleotides. As with mRNAs and rRNAs
from Physarum, no editing site is closer than 9 nucleotides.
The editing appears to be both very accurate and efficient. Insertion
of the wrong nucleotide at a site or insertion of nucleotides at
an incorrect site has not been observed. Additionally, greater than
95% of the potential editing sites in the total mitochondrial RNA
population have a nucleotide insertion (6, 20-22, 24). This
is consistent with the observation that 100% of the single tRNA
cDNA amplification products had a nucleotide inserted at editing sites.
In contrast, cDNA amplification products derived from unprocessed
tRNAs have a relatively large number of potential editing sites
that lack nucleotide insertions. This implies that editing and 5'
and 3' tRNA processing may be associated.
In Physarum, it is not known precisely when, relative
to transcription, RNA editing occurs. Visomirski-Robic and Gott
(30, 31) have shown that, in isolated mitochondria provided
with limiting concentrations of one exogenous nucleotide, editing can occur in nascent RNAs at sites very close to the mitochondrial transcription complex. This is consistent with our results that RNA
editing is associated with tRNA processing, which probably occurs
on nascent transcripts concurrent with transcription. Although it is
clear that under some conditions editing can be closely associated with
transcription, it is still not clear whether editing is
cotranscriptional, in the sense that the nontemplated nucleotides are
added to the 3' end of the nascent RNA, or posttranscriptional, in the
sense that the nontemplated nucleotides are inserted between adjacent
nucleotides in the RNA.
If RNA editing in Physarum and Didymium is
cotranscriptional, then the cDNAs that lack insertions at editing sites
must be derived from aberrant RNAs that have not been edited at some
sites. Visomirski-Robic and Gott (31) have shown that RNAs
with missing cytidines at editing sites are produced in isolated
mitochondria when CTP concentrations are low. The fact that unprocessed
tRNAs are enriched in potential editing sites that do not have
insertions would then indicate that editing of tRNAs may be a
prerequisite for tRNA processing. Modificational editing of
tRNAs in plant mitochondria has been shown to be required for
proper tRNA processing (2, 16, 18, 19). However, if
partially edited sequences are enriched in unprocessed RNAs because
partially edited RNAs cannot be processed, then one would not expect
fully edited versions of the cDNAs to also be enriched in these
populations. tRNA processing must be rapid and efficient since
unprocessed forms cannot be detected in Northern blots of mitochondrial
RNA (Fig. 1B), and so fully edited forms would be expected to be
rapidly processed. In contrast to this expectation, fully edited
sequences (pattern type 1 in Tables 1, 2, and 3) were observed for each
of the three unprocessed polycistronic transcripts selected. Another inconsistency with the idea that the enrichment of partially edited cDNAs is derived from aberrantly edited RNAs which cannot be processed is the occurrence of multiple unedited sites in the unprocessed tRNA population. Under normal growth conditions, the frequency of
editing sites without insertions is at most 5% (6, 20-22, 24). If insertions at editing sites are independent of one
another, this would predict that the probability of multiple editing
site errors within a single transcript would be very rare. However, the
majority of cDNAs corresponding to partially edited tRNAs are
missing nucleotides at multiple potential editing sites.
If RNA editing in Physarum and Didymium is
posttranscriptional, then the unprocessed, partially edited transcripts
may be not the result of editing errors but the result of incomplete editing of tRNA precursors. In this case, partially edited
sequences would be enriched in unprocessed tRNAs because RNA
editing and tRNA processing are concurrent, so that unedited
sites which are rare or absent in mature tRNAs are present in
tRNAs which have not yet been processed. The low level of unedited
sites in the RNA population then reflects the rate of RNA editing and
not its error frequency. Whether the enrichment of unedited sites in
cDNAs derived from unprocessed tRNAs implies that editing is
concurrent with processing or that editing is required for processing,
it is likely that RNA editing is an early event in tRNA expression in Physarum and Didymium mitochondria.
Comparison of the editing in the tRNAs of Didymium and
Physarum indicates that both organisms have the same type of
tRNA editing. This implies that this form of RNA editing is at
least as ancient as the divergence of Physarum and
Didymium (400 to 500 million years ago [8])
and that this type of RNA editing is likely to be distributed
throughout the Myxomycota. Although the type of tRNA editing seems
to be conserved between Physarum and Didymium, the location of the editing sites in the tRNAs of these two
organisms is, with only one exception, different even though tRNA
gene location and order as well as tRNA structure and sequence are
relatively conserved (75% nucleotide identity). This is the first
example of evolutionary variation in editing site location in the
Myxomycota. This variation could be the result of the loss of different
editing sites in Physarum and Didymium since
their divergence from a common ancestor with a higher density of
editing sites. Conversely, the variability of editing site location
could result from the establishment of different sites after the
divergence of these organisms. A third possibility is that sites have
been both lost and gained in a coordinated way so as to maintain
editing site density. In any case, it is clear that editing sites are
not fixed or static but can be lost or gained over time and that the
rate of editing site variation can exceed the rate of sequence
divergence in mtDNA.
How editing sites are specified is still unknown. It could be that base
pairing in the stems of the tRNA acts as the template for editing,
as has been proposed by Lonergan and Gray (11, 12) for 5'
tRNA editing in A. castellanii and by Laforest et al.
(10) for 5' tRNA editing in S. punctatus.
However, this would not explain how editing sites in loop regions of
tRNAs are indicated, and the variation of editing site location
between Physarum and Didymium argues that
location is not specified by an intrinsic property of the tRNA
since tRNA structure and sequence are conserved relative to editing
site location. Further comparisons will be necessary to determine if
the insertional pattern of editing or RNA editing itself is conserved
among the other members of the Myxomycota.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENT |
This research was supported in part by a research grant to
D.M. from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences
(GM44223), National Institutes of Health.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Molecular and Cell Biology, The University of Texas at Dallas,
Richardson, TX 75080. Phone: (972) 883-2539. Fax: (972) 883-2409. E-mail: dmiller{at}utdallas.edu.
Present address: Betagene, Dallas, TX 75207.
Present address: Department of Surgery, National University of
Singapore, Singapore 119260.
 |
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