Guide RNAs (gRNAs) are encoded both in the maxicircle and
minicircle components of the mitochondrial DNA of trypanosomatid
protozoa. These RNAs mediate the precise insertion and deletion
of U residues in transcripts of the maxicircle DNA. We showed
previously that the old UC laboratory strain of Leishmania
tarentolae apparently lost more than 40 minicircle-encoded
gRNAs that are present in the recently isolated LEM125 strain
[Thiemann et al., EMBO J, 1994,
13:5689–5700]. We have further analyzed
the population of minicircle-encoded gRNAs in the LEM125 strain.
Sau3AI and MspI minicircle libraries were
constructed and screened for novel gRNAs by negative colony
hybridization. This search yielded 20 minicircles encoding new
gRNAs that covered most of the remaining gaps in the editing
cascades of the ND8, ND9, G4, and G5 genes, and in addition,
more than 30 minicircles containing either unassigned or
undetectable gRNA genes. We also completely sequenced 34 of
the 45 minicircle sequence classes encoding previously identified
gRNAs. A total of 19 pairs of redundant gRNAs, which are gRNAs
of different sequences covering the same editing blocks, were
identified. The gRNAs in each redundant pair generally had
different relative abundances and different extents of mismatches
with edited sequences. Alignments of the minicircles encoding
redundant gRNAs yielded 59 to 93% matching nucleotides, suggesting
an origin from duplication of ancestral minicircles and subsequent
genetic drift. We propose a functional explanation for the
existence of redundant gRNAs in this strain.