Abstract

Citrate synthase, an essential enzyme of the tricarboxylic acid cycle in mitochondria, was purified from acetate-grown Candida tropicalis. Results from SDS-PAGE and gel filtration showed that this enzyme was a dimer composed of 45-kDa subunits. A citrate synthase cDNA fragment was amplified by the 5'-RACE method. Nucleotide sequence analysis of this cDNA fragment revealed that the deduced amino acid sequence contained an extended leader sequence which is suggested to be a mitochondrial targeting signal, as judged from helical wheel analysis. Using this cDNA probe, one genomic citrate synthase clone was isolated from a yeast lambdaEMBL3 library. The nucleotide sequence of the gene encoding C. tropicalis citrate synthase, CtCIT, revealed the presence of a 79-bp intron in the N-terminal region. Sequences essential as yeast splicing motifs were present in this intron. When the CtCIT gene including its intron was introduced into Saccharomyces cerevisiae using the promoter UPR-ICL, citrate synthase activity was highly induced, which strongly indicated that this intron was correctly spliced in S. cerevisiae.

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