Nucleic Acids Research, Vol 27, Issue 20 3970-3975, Copyright © 1999 by Oxford University Press
L Chang, S Lin, H Huang and M Hsiao
Two genomic DNAs with a size of approximately 2.8 kb, isolated from the
liver of Bungarus multicinctus (Taiwan banded krait), encode the precursors
of the long neurotoxins, alpha-Bgt(A31) and alpha-Bgt(V31), respectively.
Both genes share virtually identical overall organization with three exons
separated by two introns, which were inserted in the same positions in the
coding regions of the genes. Moreover, their nucleotide sequences share
approximately 98% identity. This result indicates that the two genes
co-exist in the genome of B.multicinctus, and probably arose from gene
duplication. The exon/intron structures of the alpha-Bgt genes were
essentially the same as those reported for the short neurotoxins. This
reflects that the long and short neurotoxins should share a common
evolutionary origin. Comparative analyses on long neurotoxin and short
neurotoxin genes showed that the protein coding regions of the exons were
more diverse than the introns except for the signal peptide domain. This
implies that the protein coding regions of the neurotoxins may have evolved
via accelerated evolution. PCR amplification of venom gland cDNA mixtures
revealed that only two amino acid sequences corresponding to alpha-Bgt(A31)
and alpha-Bgt(V31) could be deduced from the cDNAs. The results of
chromatographic analyses and protein sequencing again emphasized the view
that, with the exception of alpha-Bgt(A31) and alpha-Bgt(V31), no other
alpha-Bgt isotoxins with amino acid substitutions were present in
B.multicinctus venom. In contrast to the proposition of Liu et al. (
Nucleic Acids Res., 1998,26, 5624-5629), our findings strongly suggest that
each alpha-Bgt isotoxin is derived from the respective gene, and that
alpha-Bgt RNA polymorphism does not originate from one single, intronless
gene by the mechanism of RNA editing.
ARTICLES
Genetic organization of alpha-bungarotoxins from Bungarus multicinctus (Taiwan banded krait): evidence showing that the production of alpha- bungarotoxin isotoxins is not derived from edited mRNAs
Institute of Biomedical Sciences, National Sun Yat-Sen University, Kaohsiung 804, Taiwan. lschang@mail.nsysu.edu.tw
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