Abstract

A DNA sequencing program was applied to the small (<3 Mb) genome of the microsporidian Encephalitozoon cuniculi, an amitochondriate eukaryotic parasite of mammals, and the sequence of the smallest chromosome was determined. The approximately 224-kb E. cuniculi chromosome I exhibits a dyad symmetry characterized by two identical 37-kb subtelomeric regions which are divergently oriented and extend just downstream of the inverted copies of an 8-kb duplicated cluster of six genes. Each subtelomeric region comprises a single 16S-23S rDNA transcription unit, flanked by various tandemly repeated sequences, and ends with approximately 1 kb of heterogeneous telomeric repeats. The central (or core) region of the chromosome harbors a highly compact arrangement of 132 potential protein-coding genes plus two tRNA genes (one gene per 1.14 kb). Most genes occur as single copies with no identified introns. Of these putative genes, only 53 could be assigned to known functions. A number of genes from the transcription and translation machineries as well as from other cellular processes display characteristic eukaryotic signatures or are clearly eukaryote-specific.

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