Eukaryotes Genomes - KLUYVERMYCES LACTIS
Kluyveromyces lactis is a yeast commonly used in genetics research and could potentially
be used to produce pharmaceuticals or other compounds
Kluyveromyces
lactis is a yeast species commonly used for genetic studies
and industrial applications.
Kluyveromyces
lactis(formerly Saccharomyces lactis)
is a yeast which has the ability to assimilate lactose and convert
it into lactic acid. Kluyveromyces lactis and other organisms
ie, Aspergillus niger var awamori and Escherichia coli
K12 are grown in fermenters to produce chymosin (rennet) on
a commercial scale; this rennet, which replaces the conventional
form obtained from slaughtered animals, is now widely used in cheese
production.
Yeasts
and fungi are ideal organisms for comparative genomic studies in
eukaryotes because of their small and compact genomes and because
they include a number of species such as Neurospora crassa, S. cerevisiae and Schizosaccharomyces pombe, that have been, and continue to be, used extensively in genetic
studies. However, the divergence between these three species is
ancient (estimated to be at least 300million years old) and the
organization of their genomes is quite different. The diversity
of the hemiascomycetes, a group of ascomycetes that contains most
of the known yeast species was first explored in 2000.
Complete
sequencing and comparison of four hemiascomycetous yeasts has been
undertaken these are Candida glabrata, Kluyveromyces lactis,
Debaryomyces hansenii, and Yarrowia lipolytica. They were selected
on the basis of their phylogenetic positions and their specific
interest as human pathogens, or as industrially or environmentally
important yeasts. This work, which represents the first multispecies
exploration of genome evolution across an entire eukaryotic phylum,
reveals the variety of events and mechanisms that have taken place,
and should allow useful comparisons with other phyla of multicellular
organisms when more genome sequences are determined.
K.
lactis is a heterothallic species with a predominantly haplontic
cycle, in contrast to S. cerevisiae in which the predominantly
diplobiontic cycle is pseudo-heterothallic due to mating-type switching.
References:
http://www.genomenewsnetwork.org/resources/sequenced_genomes/genome_guide_p2.shtml#kluyveromyces_lactis
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