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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2001, p. 2241-2248, Vol. 183, No. 7
Division of Infectious Diseases, University
of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois
60612,1 and Department of Biochemistry,
The Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
532262
Received 30 October 2000/Accepted 11 January 2001
Elongation factor 3 (EF3) is considered a promising drug target for
the control of fungal diseases because of its requirement for protein
synthesis and survival of fungi and a lack of EF3 in the mammalian
host. However, EF3 has been characterized only in ascomycete yeast. In
order to understand the role of EF3 in a basidiomycete yeast, we cloned
the gene encoding EF3 from Cryptococcus neoformans
(CnEF3), an important fungal pathogen in immunocompromised patients, including those infected with human immunodeficiency virus.
CnEF3 was found to encode a 1,055-amino-acid protein and has 44% identity with EF3 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae
(YEF3). Expressed CnEF3 exhibited ATPase activity that was
only modestly stimulated by ribosomes from S. cerevisiae.
In contrast, CnEF3 showed tight binding to cryptococcal ribosomes, as
shown by an inability to be removed under conditions which successfully
remove Saccharomyces EF3 from ribosomes (0.5 M KCl or 2 M
LiCl). CnEF3 also poorly complemented a YEF3
defect in a diploid null mutant and two temperature-sensitive mutants
which have been shown previously to be complemented well by
EF3 from other ascomycetes, such as Candida
albicans. These data clearly identify the presence of a
functioning EF3 in the basidiomycete yeast C. neoformans, which demonstrates an evolutionary divergence from
EF3 of ascomycete yeast.
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.7.2241-2248.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Evolutionary Divergence of an Elongation Factor 3 from Cryptococcus neoformans
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: College of
Medicine, Rm. 888, m/c 735, 808 S. Wood St., Chicago, IL 60612. Phone:
(312) 996-6070. Fax: (312) 996-5704. E-mail: prw{at}uic.edu.
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