By 10 nucleotides, relative to the other six sequences. These data are consistent with previous evidence of dinoflagellate mitochondrial transcripts occasionally occurring either fused to unrelated sequence, or truncated [23], and likely represent non-functional transcript species. In A. carterae, of three cox3H1-6 cRT-PCR amplicons, one lacks an oligo-A tail, and another is oligoadenylated one nucleotide earlier (c.f. Fig. 1B). Neither of these two variations would directly affect the sequence of complete 25033180 cox3 as they occur downstream of the 307538-42-7 splice site, and therefore such variation in A. carterae might be tolerated. Post-transcriptional RNA end capping has been described in some dinoflagellate organelles, but we observe no evidence of such modification to any of the cox3 transcripts. In the deep-branching dinoflagellate Oxyrrhis marinus 59 capping by addition of 8? U nucleotides to mitochondrial protein-encoding transcripts has been reported, and in dinoflagellate plastids mRNAs gain 39 polyuridine tracts of up to 40 nucleotides after transcription [24?6]. Both of these additions are detectible by cRT-PCR [24,26], but were not observed in cox3 transcripts for any of the taxa examined. Further capping reactions that modify the 59-phosphate group on RNA molecules, such as the modified guanine nucleotide added to the 59 end of most eukaryotic nuclear transcripts [27], would prevent RNA ligation and detection by cRT-PCR. While such capping is not known from either bacteria or mitochondria, it remains possible that further cox3 transcript species might exist in addition to those detected by cRT-PCR and transcriptomics approaches. To examine the relative abundance of cox3H1-6 and cox3H7 transcripts in comparison to full-length cox3 in dinoflagellate mitochondria, we performed ZK 36374 cost Northern blot analysis of K. veneficum total RNA. Probes were made corresponding to either cox3H1-6 or cox3H7. Each would therefore detect the respective precursor and also the full-length cox3 transcript, enabling relative steady-state quantitation of these species before and after splicing. Indeed, two bands were detected in Northern blots for each probe, and in each case these bands corresponded in size to the respective precursor and full-length cox3 (Fig. 2, arrowheads). The two bands detected by cox3H1-6 are of approximately equal abundance, whereas the cox3H7 precursor band is even more abundant than the full-length band detected by this probe. Together, these Northern blots indicate that rather than precursor transcripts being very minor components of the total RNA pool, they are present in similar amounts to full length cox3 mRNA. The high relative abundance of precursors suggests either a slow rate of trans-splicing, or a regulated process that maintains a large pool of precursors. Wetested to see if compounds that are known to perturb mitochondrial electron transport (antimycin A and Salicylhydroxamic Acid (SHAM) [28]), would lead to changes in the relative abundances of cox3 precursors, but found no evidence of such regulation in these experiments (not shown). A further result of the Northern blots was lack of evidence of additional cox3 size species as prevalent transcripts. Polycistronic transcript sequence has previously been detected in dinoflagellate mitochondria [17,23,29,30], and generation of large transcripts from few promoters is quite common in mtDNAs where large precursor RNA molecules are processed to generate individual gene transcripts [31].By 10 nucleotides, relative to the other six sequences. These data are consistent with previous evidence of dinoflagellate mitochondrial transcripts occasionally occurring either fused to unrelated sequence, or truncated [23], and likely represent non-functional transcript species. In A. carterae, of three cox3H1-6 cRT-PCR amplicons, one lacks an oligo-A tail, and another is oligoadenylated one nucleotide earlier (c.f. Fig. 1B). Neither of these two variations would directly affect the sequence of complete 25033180 cox3 as they occur downstream of the splice site, and therefore such variation in A. carterae might be tolerated. Post-transcriptional RNA end capping has been described in some dinoflagellate organelles, but we observe no evidence of such modification to any of the cox3 transcripts. In the deep-branching dinoflagellate Oxyrrhis marinus 59 capping by addition of 8? U nucleotides to mitochondrial protein-encoding transcripts has been reported, and in dinoflagellate plastids mRNAs gain 39 polyuridine tracts of up to 40 nucleotides after transcription [24?6]. Both of these additions are detectible by cRT-PCR [24,26], but were not observed in cox3 transcripts for any of the taxa examined. Further capping reactions that modify the 59-phosphate group on RNA molecules, such as the modified guanine nucleotide added to the 59 end of most eukaryotic nuclear transcripts [27], would prevent RNA ligation and detection by cRT-PCR. While such capping is not known from either bacteria or mitochondria, it remains possible that further cox3 transcript species might exist in addition to those detected by cRT-PCR and transcriptomics approaches. To examine the relative abundance of cox3H1-6 and cox3H7 transcripts in comparison to full-length cox3 in dinoflagellate mitochondria, we performed Northern blot analysis of K. veneficum total RNA. Probes were made corresponding to either cox3H1-6 or cox3H7. Each would therefore detect the respective precursor and also the full-length cox3 transcript, enabling relative steady-state quantitation of these species before and after splicing. Indeed, two bands were detected in Northern blots for each probe, and in each case these bands corresponded in size to the respective precursor and full-length cox3 (Fig. 2, arrowheads). The two bands detected by cox3H1-6 are of approximately equal abundance, whereas the cox3H7 precursor band is even more abundant than the full-length band detected by this probe. Together, these Northern blots indicate that rather than precursor transcripts being very minor components of the total RNA pool, they are present in similar amounts to full length cox3 mRNA. The high relative abundance of precursors suggests either a slow rate of trans-splicing, or a regulated process that maintains a large pool of precursors. Wetested to see if compounds that are known to perturb mitochondrial electron transport (antimycin A and Salicylhydroxamic Acid (SHAM) [28]), would lead to changes in the relative abundances of cox3 precursors, but found no evidence of such regulation in these experiments (not shown). A further result of the Northern blots was lack of evidence of additional cox3 size species as prevalent transcripts. Polycistronic transcript sequence has previously been detected in dinoflagellate mitochondria [17,23,29,30], and generation of large transcripts from few promoters is quite common in mtDNAs where large precursor RNA molecules are processed to generate individual gene transcripts [31].