Mitochondrial (mt)DNA of Secale cereale contains an open reading frame (pol-r), the potential translation product of which shows significant homology to the type-B DNA polymerase encoded by the S1 plasmid of Zea mays; it contains the highly-conserved domains IIa to V of family B polymerases. The pol-r ORF is transcribed, as proven by RT-PCR, but the transcript is not edited. Upstream of the putative start codon a potential promoter motif was detected, fitting well into the postulated consensus sequence of the transcription initiation regions of Z. mays and Triticum aestivum. The pol-r ORF occurs in mtDNA of the fertile rye variety "Halo" and the cytoplasmic male-sterile (CMS) line "Pampa". Both ORFs are almost identical, apart from the 3' terminus; pol-r from Halo can code for 289 amino acids, pol-r from Pampa for 312 amino acids. Based on codon usage and the lack of editing, pol-r is considered to be a "young" gene, probably introduced in the mtDNA of rye by recombination with an mt plasmid.
The mitochondrial (mt) genomes of rye (Secale cereale L.) lines with "normal" and cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS) inducing "Pampa" cytoplasm were compared by detailed restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) and Northern analyses. RFLP analyses using several heterologous mt genes as probes revealed considerable differences in the overall structure of the two mt genomes. With cob and atpA, the data indicate intragenic recombination and/or different copy numbers of these genes in the two cytoplasms. In spite of this heterogeneity at DNA level, the transcriptional patterns of nine out of ten mitochondrial genes analysed are unaffected. The exception is in the "Pampa" cytoplasm which contains an additional cob-homologous transcript. Since this transcript is strongly reduced in the presence of restorer genes, it might causally be correlated to the CMS phenotype.
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