Abstract
A substantial amount of cytochrome oxidase subunit III (COIII) mRNA continues to be synthesized de novo in Trypanosoma brucei in the presence of actinomycin D, presumably by a DNA-independent transcription process. We describe the identification of negative-strand COIII RNA molecules, characterization of their termini, and the detection of RNA-dependent RNA polymerase activity. Three lines of evidence for the existence of negative-strand COIII RNA are presented: (i) hybridization with oligonucleotide probes with the same polarity as mRNA after preliminary enrichment for putative negative-strand RNA by affinity purification; (ii) cloning and sequencing of negative-strand complements for the unedited, edited, and partially edited COIII RNA; and (iii) exact correspondence of the terminal sequences of the putative negative-strand RNA molecules to the ends of COIII RNA. The presence of negative-strand complements of COIII RNA is consistent with the notion that a significant amount of mRNA in T. brucei is synthesized by an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase with negative-strand RNA as an intermediate template.
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