In the yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae six unlinked structural genes for invertase, the
SUC genes, are known. We sequenced about 800 bp of the 5

non-coding region and the first 220 bp of the coding region of the genes
SUC1, SUC3, SUC4 and
SUC5 and compared them with the previously sequenced genes
SUC2 and
SUC7 (Sarokin and Carlson 1985a). All are highly homologous within the coding region but in the non-coding region
SUC1 shows some differences and
SUC2 is more highly diverged. Two different kinds of TATA boxes were identified: the more strongly expressed genes
SUC1, 2 and
4 have the sequence TATAAA and the more weakly expressed genes
SUC3, 5 and
7 have TACAAA. Though the
SUC1 sequence is in general more homologous to the other
SUC genes, the region between-140 and + 100 of
SUC1 is nearly identical to
SUC2. This could be due to a gene conversion between
SUC1 and the silent
suc2
o
allele which occurs in the strains carrying
SUC1. Within the upstream regions of all the
SUC genes three regions with palindromic sequences analogous to stem and loop structures were identified. Comparable structure could be detected in similar positions in the upstream sequences of the divergently transcribed yeast gene pairs
MAL6S-MAL6T and
GAL1-GAL10. Implications for the importance of these structures in the regulation and initiation of transcription are discussed.
Key words
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
- Invertase genes - Promoter sequences - Palindromes
Communicated by C.P. Hollenberg