Publication | Open Access
The H circles of Leishmania tarentolae are a unique amplifiable system of oligomeric DNAs associated with drug resistance.
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Citations
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References
1988
Year
Comparative GenomicsGeneticsMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsGenomicsVisceral LeishmaniasisDrug ResistanceMolecular CharacterizationDrug Resistance AnalysisParasitic ProtozoaH CirclesGenome StructureDna ReplicationChromosomal RearrangementStructural BiologyOligomeric DnasBiologyMonomeric CirclesNatural SciencesGenetic EngineeringH Circle DimersMedicineMutagenesis
We have induced drug resistance against methotrexate, an inhibitor of dihydrofolate reductase, and CB3717, an inhibitor of thymidylate synthetase in a strain of Leishmania tarentolae. The drug-resistant strains contain extrachromosomal DNA circles of 68 kilobases with a 30-kilobase inverted duplication flanked by 4- and 5 kilobase unique segments. We show that these circles are highly homologous to the drug-induced H circles of L. tropica (1). All three L. tarentolae strains analyzed contain a chromosomal copy of the H region without duplication, but two of the three strains contain extrachromosomal H circles as well, predominantly present as H circle dimers in one strain and as tetramers in the other. After induction of methotrexate resistance, monomeric circles, presumably derived from the oligomers, become the major type of circle. Our results indicate that the H region represents a genomic region that can be copied at very low frequency to yield circles by a precise, but unusual mechanism under natural conditions in wild-type cells. Although superficially analogous to the episomes of bacteria, the system is without precedent in nature.
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