We have cloned a nuclear gene from the marine red alga
Gracilaria verrucosa that encodes the complete 779 amino-acid mitochondral aconitase (m-ACN), the first characterized from a photosynthetic organism. The
N-terminal 28 deduced amino acids are predicted to constitute the mitochondrial transit peptide, the first described from a red alga. Putative transcriptional
cis-acting elements were identified in the upstream untranslated region. The
G. verrucosa m-ACN gene (
m-ACN) is present in a single copy and is located ca. 1.5 kb upstream from the single-copy polyubiquitin gene. The single spliceosomal intron is located near the 5

end of the region encoding the mature m-ACN in precisely the same location and phase as intron 2 in
Caenorhabditis elegans m-ACN; sequences at its 3

and 5

splice junctions and at the predicted lariat branch point conform well to the eukaryote consensus sequences. Multiple protein-sequence alignment of m-ACN, bacterial aconitase (b-ACN) and iron-responsive element-binding protein (IRE-BP), and phylogenetic analyses, revealed that m-ACN does not share a recent common ancestry with either b-ACN or IRE-BP.
Key words aconitase - nuclear-encoded mitochondrial protein - iron-responsive element-binding protein - Rhodophyta -
Gracilaria verrucosa
The nucleotide sequence data reported will appear in the GSDB Nucleotide Sequence Database under the accession number U17709.