Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, Purdue University, 175 S. University Street, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907-2063
2. Biology Department, Washington University in St. Louis, Campus Box 1137, One Brookings Drive, St. Louis, Missouri 63130
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Development in ciliated protozoa involves extensive genome reorganization within differentiating macronuclei, which shapes the somatic genome of the next vegetative generation. Major events of macronuclear differentiation include excision of internal eliminated sequences (IESs), chromosome fragmentation, and genome amplification. Proteins required for these events include those with homology throughout eukaryotes as well as proteins apparently unique to ciliates. In this study, we identified the ciliate-specific
D
efective in
I
ES
E
xcision 5 (
DIE5
) genes of
Paramecium tetraurelia
(
PtDIE5
) and
Tetrahymena thermophila
(
TtDIE5
) as orthologs that encode nuclear proteins expressed exclusively during development. Abrogation of PtDie5 protein (PtDie5p) function by RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated silencing or TtDie5p by gene disruption resulted in the failure of developing macronuclei to differentiate into new somatic nuclei.
Tetrahymena
Δ
DIE5
cells arrested late in development and failed to complete genome amplification, whereas RNAi-treated
Paramecium
cells highly amplified new macronuclear DNA before the failure in differentiation, findings that highlight clear differences in the biology of these distantly related species. Nevertheless, IES excision and chromosome fragmentation failed to occur in either ciliate, which strongly supports that Die5p is a critical player in these processes. In
Tetrahymena
, loss of zygotic expression during development was sufficient to block nuclear differentiation. This observation, together with the finding that knockdown of Die5p in
Paramecium
still allows genome amplification, indicates that this protein acts late in macronuclear development. Even though DNA rearrangements in these two ciliates look to be quite distinct, analysis of
DIE5
establishes the action of a conserved mechanism within the genome reorganization pathway.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
30 articles.
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