Abstract

1. Rat-liver mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) contains at least 8 cleavage sites for the restriction endonuclease Eco RI, 6 for the restriction endonuclease Hind III, 2 for the restriction endonuclease Bam HI and 11 for the restriction endonuclease Hap II. 2. The physical map of the restriction fragments of Eco RI, Hind III, Bam HI and Hap II is constructed on the basis of: (a) the analysis of partially restricted fragments; (b) analysis of the double digests of total mtDNA; (c) the digestion of isolated restriction fragments with other restriction endonucleases; (d) the identification of fragments of complete single and double digestions and of partially digested fragments containing the base sequences complementary to the 12-S and 16-S RNAs of rat-liver mitochondrial ribosomes. 3. The genes for the ribosomal RNAs are shown to be closely linked. This result differs from data previously reported (Saccone, C., Pepe, G., Cantatore, P., Terpstra, P. and Kroon, A.M. (1976) in The Genetic Function of Mitochondrial DNA, pp. 27–36, Elsevier/North-Holland Biomedical Press, Amsterdam). 4. The origin of replication (D-loop) is localized in the vicinity of the small ribosomal RNA gene and the direction of replication is distant from this gene. 5. The mitochondrial tRNA genes are scattered over the genome as in other animal mtDNAs. The approximate minimal number of tRNA genes is 16–20. 6. We concluded previously that the Eco RI restriction fragments A and D are not adjacent and failed to show the overlap of the 16 S rRNA gene for the Eco RI fragment D and Hind III fragment A. This misinterpretation was due to the fact that the two smallest Eco RI fragments could not be detected with the methods applied and to the lower specific radioactivity of the ribosomal RNAs used in the first series of hybridization experiments.

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