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Killer DNA Plasmids of the YeastKluyveromyces lactis

✍ Scribed by Micheline Wésolowski; Patrick Dumazert; Hiroshi Fukuhara


Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Year
1982
Tongue
English
Weight
755 KB
Volume
5
Category
Article
ISSN
0172-8083

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✦ Synopsis


We have studied the structure of the two linear DNA plasmids, kl and k2, present in killer strains of Kluyveromyces lactis. Two killer strains of different origins, CBS 2359 and IFO 1267 were examined. For both strains, identical restriction maps of kl and k2 DNA were obtained. Several restriction sites previously reported for the kl DNA of the strain IFO 1267 have been confirmed. The molecular weights of these double-stranded DNAs were 8.8 kilobase pairs for kl and 13.4 for k2, as determined by electrophoresis of restriction fragments. The plasmid DNA from a nonkiller mutant, NK2/1, was also examined. In this mutant, the kl DNA was replaced by a smaller DNA (5.9 kilobase pairs), the k2 DNA being normal. Restriction enzyme analysis showed that the new plasmid DNA was also linear. Hybridization experiments demonstrated that it was derived from the kl DNA by deletion of a 2.9 kilobase pair segment from the central part of the kl DNA. The deleted segment carries a gene involved in toxin production, but is not related to immunity since the mutant is resistant to killers. The plasmid DNA of K. lactis showed no detectable sequence homology with the double stranded RNA of the killer system of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Neither was any homology found with nuclear and mitochondria) DNA.


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