Ascoidea asiatica

Ascoidea asiatica
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Saccharomycetes
Order: Saccharomycetales
Family: Ascoideaceae
Genus: Ascoidea
Species: Ascoidea asiatica
L.R. Batra & Francke-Grosman (1964)

Ascoidea asiatica is a species of yeast in the Ascoideaceae family discovered in 1964.[1]

Biochemistry

In 2018, it was reported by researchers at the University of Bath and the Max-Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry that the CUG sense codon in this yeast is translated by two different tRNAs, one coding for serine and one for leucine, with approximately equal probability.[2] This is the first reported instance of a proteome that is stochastically encoded from the genome. This codon is rarely used in this species, which has led to the suggestion that stochastic encoding is deleterious to the organism.

References

  1. Batra, L.R.; Francke-Grosmann, H. 1964. Two new ambrosia fungi - Ascoidea asiatica and A. africana. Mycologia. 56:632-636. DOI: 10.2307/3756369 URL:
  2. Mühlhausen, S., Dieter Schmitt, H., Pan, K., Plessmann, U., Urlaub, H., D. Hurst, L., & Kollmar, M. (2018). Endogenous Stochastic Decoding of the CUG Codon by Competing Ser- and Leu-tRNAs in Ascoidea asiatica. Current Biology. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2018.04.085


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