Mitochondrial DNA in Candida pintolopesii, a yeast indigenous to the surface of the secreting epithelium of the murine stomach.

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Candida pintolopesii 108-1 is an indigenous yeast which colonizes the surface of the secreting gastric mucosa of mice. We have been exploring the aerobic respiratory capacities of this organism in reference to its capacity to colonize the stomach surface, an environment that could contain little oxygen for microbial growth. In this paper, we report mitochondrial DNA and membranes in cells of a strain of this yeast isolated from the gastric epithelium of a mouse and compare the findings with those made by other investigators in studies of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Putative mitochondrial DNA was isolated from crude lysates of C. pintolopesii and S. cerevisiae as fluorescing bands in CsCl gradients containing 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole. The DNA from C. pintolopesii hybridized with a 32P-labeled DNA probe for the 21S rRNA gene encoded by mitochondrial DNA in S. cerevisiae. Postvital cell staining with 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole and rhodamine 123 revealed mitochondrial DNA and membranes, respectively, in the cytoplasm of intact C. pintolopesii cells. The staining patterns were generally similar to those reported for S. cerevisiae. Finally, structures similar to those reported to be mitochondria in electron micrographs of S. cerevisiae were seen in preparations of C. pintolopesii cells examined by transmission electron microscopy. These data confirm findings from studies of its respiratory capacity published earlier that a strain of C. pintolopesii isolated directly from its native habitat has functional mitochondria.

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