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Phylogenetic analysis of the RNA polymerases ofTrypanosoma brucei, with special reference to class-specific transcription

✍ Scribed by Waldemar Jess; Peter Palm; Raymond Evers; Josef Köck; Albert W. C. A. Cornelissen


Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
553 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
0172-8083

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✦ Synopsis


We have sequenced the genes encoding to largest subunits of the three classes of DNA-dependent RNA polymerases of Trypanosoma brucei. The nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences were compared and aligned with the corresponding sequences of other eukaryotes. Phylogenetic relationships were subsequently calculated with a distant matrix, a bootstrapped parsimony and a maximum-likelihood method. These independent calculations resulted in trees with very similar topologies. The analyses show that all the largest subunits of T. brucei are evolutionarily distant members within each of the three RNA polymerase classes. An early separation of the trypanosomal subunits from the eukaryotic lineage might form the fundamental basis for the unusual transcription process of this species. Finally, all dendrograms show a separate ramification for the largest subunit of RNA polymerase I, II and III. RNA polymerase II and/or III form a bifurcation with the archaebacterial lineage, RNA polymerase I, however, arises separately from the eubacterial beta' lineage. This suggests that the three eukaryotic RNA polymerase classes are not simply derived by two gene duplications of an ancestral gene with subsequent differentiation.