Abstract

The mitochondrion of Leishmania tarentolae contains approximately 35-40 tRNAs many of which comigrate with cytoplasmic tRNAs. Both mitochondrial (KtRNA) and cytoplasmic (CtRNA) tRNAs are functional, as they could be acylated either by mitochondrial or cytoplasmic synthetase extracts. There are two methionyl tRNA species in the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial fractions, one of which is unique to each fraction, indicating that the KtRNA fraction is free of CtRNA contamination. Leucyl and glycyl tRNAs were identified by hybridization with a genomic clone from Trypanosoma brucei. KtRNA hybridizes with nuclear chromosomes, but not with minicircle or maxicircle DNA. KtRNA isolated by DEAE chromatography or agarose gel electrophoresis contains additional small RNAs which hybridize with both minicircle and maxicircle DNA. These transcripts do not migrate like tRNAs in acrylamide gels and their functions is unknown. We suggest that most if not all mitochondrial tRNAs in L. tarentolae are nuclear-encoded and imported into the mitochondrion.

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