Abstract:
The invention discloses the application of genetic engineering techniques to create novel strains of A. niger which produce high levels of catalase (catR gene product, catalase-R) while generating minimal sodium gluconate waste material.

Description:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     The invention relates to the application of genetic engineering techniques to create novel strains of A. niger which produce high levels of an endogenous catalase enzyme (catR gene product, catalase-R) while generating minimal sodium gluconate waste material. Specifically, high levels of catalase-R are generated through replacement of the endogenous catR gene promoter with the A. niger glucoamylase (glaA) gene promoter which results in not only higher levels of catalase-R, but also eliminates the requirement for hydrogen peroxide to act as an inducer for catalase synthesis, and deletion of the endogenous glucose oxidase (goxA) gene greatly reduces the level of sodium gluconate waste product, thereby minimizing the need for expensive waste handling. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     Catalases [hydrogen peroxide: hydrogen peroxide oxidoreductases (EC 1.11.1.6)] are enzymes which catalyze the conversion of hydrogen peroxide (H 2  O 2 ) to oxygen (O 2 ) and water (H 2  O) according to the following formula: ##STR1## 
     These ubiquitous enzymes have been purified from a variety of animal tissues, plants and microorganisms (Chance and Maehly 1955 Methods Enzymol. 2: 764-791; Jones and Wilson 1978 in H. Sigel (ed.), Metal Ions in Biological Systems, Vol. 7, Marcel Dekker Inc., New York). Nearly all forms of the enzyme which have been characterized consist of four polypeptide subunits, each having a molecular weight of 50,000 to 60,000 and containing one protohemin prosthetic group per subunit (Wasserman and Hultin 1981 Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 212: 385-392; Hartig and Ruis 1986 Eur. J. Biochem. 160: 487-490). Bovine liver catalase has been the most extensively studied variety of this enzyme [Schonbaum and Change 1976 in The Enzymes (P. D. Boyer, ed.) 3rd edn., vol. 13, pp. 363-408, Academic Press, New York]. The complete amino acid sequence and three dimensional structure of bovine liver catalase are known (Schroeder, et al., 1982 Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 214: 397-412; Murphy, et al., 1981 J. Mol. Biol. 152: 465-499). 
     Although less well-studied from a biochemical and biophysical standpoint, catalases from filamentous fungi have several characteristics that distinguish them from their mammalian counterparts. While similar in subunit number and heme content, fungal catalases are substantially larger molecules than those from other organisms, having subunit molecular weights ranging from 80,000 to 97,000 (Vainshtein, et al., 1986 J. Mol. Biol. 188: 63-72; Jacob and Orme-Johnson 1979 Biochem. 18: 2967-2975; Jones, et al., 1987 Biochim. Biophys. Acta 913: 395-398). More importantly, catalases from fungi such as Aspergillus niger are more stable than beef liver catalase to proteolysis and to inactivation by glutaraldehyde, SDS, and have lower affinity for catalase inhibitors such as cyanide, azide and fluoride (Wasserman and Hultin 1981 Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 212: 385-392). In addition, A. niger catalase is significantly more stable than beef liver catalase when subjected to extremes of pH, hydrogen peroxide, and temperature (Scott and Hammer 1960 Enzymologia 22: 229- 237). Although fungal catalases offer stability advantages, the corresponding mammalian enzymes such as beef liver catalase appear to have higher catalytic activity (Gruft, et al., 1978; Kikuchi-Torii, et al., 1982). However, since enzyme stability is an important factor in the biotechnological utilization of enzymes, there has been considerable interest in the use of fungal catalases, especially for applications involving neutralization of high concentrations of hydrogen peroxide. Vasudevan and Weiland (1990 Biotechnol. Bioeng. 36: 783-789) observed that the rate of deactivation in H 2  O 2  was at least an order of magnitude lower for A. niger catalase than for beef liver catalase. The differences in stability of these two enzymes can probably be attributed to differences in structural characteristics and composition of the proteins [Vasudevan and Weiland 1990 Biotechnol. Bioeng. 36: 783-789]. 
     Catalase preparations from A. niger are sold commercially for diagnostic enzyme kits, for the enzymatic production of sodium gluconate from glucose, for the neutralization of H 2  O 2  waste, and for the removal of H 2  O 2  and/or generation of O 2  in foods and beverages. Traditionally, beef liver catalase has been the preferred enzyme for diagnostic purposes and for pharmaceutical-related applications (e.g., contact-lens cleaning/disinfection/H 2  O 2  neutralization). However, recent outbreaks of a slow-virus disease known as BSE (bovine spongiform encephalopathy) in European cattle herds and fear that this disease might be spread to man [Dealler and Lacey 1991 Nutr. Health (Bicester) 7: 117-134; Dealler and Lacey 1990 Food Microbiol. 7: 253-280] have aroused interests in finding alternatives to beef liver catalase for most industrial applications. 
     Little information has been published regarding the regulation of catalase synthesis in A. niger. However, it has been observed that catalase is produced in response to the generation of H 2  O 2  during growth of the organism on glucose or fatty acids. For example, during the metabolism of glucose, H 2  O 2  is formed by oxidation of the sugar to give gluconate. This reaction is catalyzed by the enzyme glucose oxidase: ##STR2## Cellular metabolism of fatty acids, which occurs in specialized organelles known as peroxisomes, also yields H 2  O 2  which induces the formation of catalase. However, in a distantly related fungus (yeast), Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a specific catalase is induced during growth on fatty acids. This catalase, termed catalase-A (atypical), is localized chiefly in peroxisomes where fatty acid oxidation occurs. A second S. cerevisiae enzyme, catalase-T (typical) is a soluble cytoplasmic enzyme which is synthesized in response to a variety of other metabolic and environmental stresses. These two yeast catalases are the products of two different nuclear genes, designated CTA1 and CTT1. Similarly, two catalase genes have been isolated from A. niger (Genencor International, Inc., unpublished). The A. niger catA gene, cloned by cross-hybridization to the yeast CTA1 gene, encodes a catalase enzyme which is induced primarily during growth on fatty acids and is presumably peroxisomal. This enzyme (catalase-A) is not of commercial importance at this time, however, a second cloned A. niger catalase gene, designated as catR, encodes a soluble cytoplasmic enzyme (catalase-R) which represents the major activity in commercial catalase preparations. 
     Because of the obvious commercial interest in A. niger catalases, it would be desirable to obtain A. niger strains which produce increased levels of the catR gene product. Furthermore, it would be a significant advantage to effect high levels of catalase synthesis without the need to generate hydrogen peroxide as an inducer. Concomitant with the generation of hydrogen peroxide is the formation of sodium gluconate which represents a waste disposal problem. Thus, it is also highly desirable to minimize the production of gluconate in large scale fermentations with catalase production strains of A. niger. This invention discloses a solution for simultaneously accomplishing all of these objectives. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     It has been discovered that it is possible to increase the expression of catalase-R (catR gene product) without the need to supply hydrogen peroxide as an inducer of catalase synthesis. Simultaneously, it was discovered that elimination of glucose oxidase gene expression (by goxA gene deletion) minimizes the generation of gluconate waste material, thereby circumventing the need for expensive waste treatment processes. 
     The invention includes a gene encoding Aspergillus niger catalase-R (catR gene) to which promoter and terminator elements of the A. niger glucoamylase (glaA) gene were functionally attached. Concomitantly, the coding region of the A. niger glucose oxidase (goxA) gene was destroyed using a targeted gene replacement strategy. The invention also includes a transformed A. niger organism which is capable of expressing high levels of catalase-R without hydrogen peroxide induction. This organism contains a functional expression unit comprising the catR gene, to which the A. niger glaA gene promoter and terminator sequences have been functionally attached. 
     The inventors also disclose a method for producing high levels of catalase-R comprising growth of transformed A. niger cells which contain chromosomally integrated copes of the catR gene under operational control of the A. niger glaA promoter. 
    
    
     FIGURES 
     FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of the construction of the catR expression plasmid which contains the A. niger glaA promoter, catR coding region, glaA terminator and A. niger pyrG gene. A linear fragment (EC2L) containing these components was excised by digestion with NotI and PmeI and used to transform the host strain A. niger ΔgoxA pyrG metC. 
     FIG. 2 (SEQ ID NOS:4 and 5) shows the nucleotide sequence and deduced amino acid sequence of the A. niger catR gene and flanking regions. Restriction sites for enzymes recognizing hexanucleotide and octanucleotide sequences are shown. Introns are denoted by dashed lines. Deduced amino acid sequences corresponding to peptides sequences directly from the catalase-R protein are underlined with a solid bar. 
     FIG. 3 (SEQ ID NO:6) is the complete nucleotide sequence of the linear fragment (EC2L) used to transform A. niger ΔgoxA pyrG metC. 
     FIG. 4, Panel A is a diagrammatic representation of the construction of the A. niger vector for deletion of the glucose oxidase (goxA) gene. A linear fragment comprising the SmaI-ClaI segment was excised and used to transform the host strain A. niger pyrG. Panel B is a schematic showing the expected integration event at the goxA locus which results in replacement of the goxA coding region with the A. niger pyrG gene. 
     FIG. 5 is a graph showing catalase production among strains of A. niger ΔgoxA pyrG metC transformed with the catR expression cassette (EC2L). The original parent strain, A. niger FS-1, and the host strain A. niger ΔgoxA pyrG metC are included as controls. Each strain was grown in duplicate and the assay results from each are shown. 
    
    
     DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     The details of the catR expression vector construction and genetic modifications used to derive improved catalase production strains are described. One skilled in the art will understand that various changes in the following examples could be made. Accordingly, the examples are not intended to be limiting. 
     The techniques used in closing the A. niger catR gene and construction of the catR expression cassette are conventional techniques described in Sambrook, et al., 1989 Molecular Cloning, A Laboratory Manual, Cold Spring Harbor Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. 
     1. Cloning and Characterization of the A. niger catR Gene 
     Purified catalase-R was obtained from a commercial preparation of A. niger catalase (Fermcolase 1000, Genencor International, Inc.) and a series of proteolytic fragments were generated. These peptide fragments were subjected to amino acid sequence analysis. The amino acid sequence information was employed to design synthetic DNA probes for identification of catR-specific cDNA sequences contained within a λgt11 library. Briefly, the peptide fragment Met-Phe-Trp-Asn-Ser-Leu-Ile-Pro-Ala-Glu-Gln-Gln-Met was used to design a pool of three synthetic oligonucleotides having the following sequences: ##STR3## 
     This peptide was chosen because the amino acids give minimally degenerate codon choices, i.e., the differences among the three synthetic oligonucleotides represent alternate codon choices where there was not strong bias in the known codon usage pattern for A. niger. This position of this proteolytic fragment corresponds to peptide 3 shown in FIG. 2 (amino acid nos. 487-499 of SEQ ID NOS:4 and 5). A clone containing a partial cDNA fragment was positively identified by hybridization with the synthetic DNA probe and nucleotide sequence analysis of this clone confirmed that it encoded catalase-R. This cloned cDNA segment was used to probe a library of A. niger genomic DNA. Subsequently, the entire catR gene, plus upstream and downstream transcriptional control elements, was assembled as a 9.0 kb HindIII-KhoI restriction fragment. The nucleotide sequence of the catR coding region has been determined and is given in FIG. 3 (SEQ ID NO:6). 
     2. Construction of a Catalase Expression Vector-Cassette (EC2) Used for Transformation of A. niger 
     The catR expression vector used for these studies utilizes transcriptional and translational control signals from the well-characterized A. niger glucoamylase (glaA) gene. Unlike the catR promoter, the strong glaA promoter does not require H 2  O 2  for induction. Instead, the glaA promoter responds to the presence of starch, maltose or other malto-oligosaccharides (Nunberg, et al., 1984 Mol. Cell. Biol. 4: 2306-2316; Barton, et al., 1972 J. Bacteriol. 111: 771-777; Fowler, et al., 1990 Curr. Genet. 18: 537-545). Thus, use of the glaA promoter allows construction of catalase production strains which are not dependent on the generation of hydrogen peroxide for induction of catalase synthesis. Construction of the vector-cassette for expression of catalase under transcriptional control of the glaA promoter is outlined in FIG. 1. The essential feature of this construct is that the glucoamylase-catalase expression unit (i.e., glaA promoter+catR coding region+glaA terminator) and the adjacent selectable marker (the A. niger pyrG gene) can be excised on a single NotI-PmeI restriction fragment (FIG. 1). 
     The catR coding region was joined to the glaA promoter utilizing a synthetic oligonucleotide linker (13 base pairs) designed to couple these two DNA segments via a BglII site in the glaA promoter to a unique SspI site four base pairs after the catR start codon (introduced by site-directed mutagenesis). Insertion of this linker restores the nucleotide sequence of catR to that which existed prior to the site-directed mutagenesis and precisely fuses the catR coding region to the glaA promoter. In a description of the glaA promoter region given by Fowler, et al., (1990 Curr. Genet. 18: 537-545) it was noted that there are DNA sequences far upstream of the start codon which are required for high level expression. These sequences, which presumably represent transcriptional enhancer elements, are included on the 1.9 kb glaA promoter segment included in construction of the catR expression cassette. Similarly, the glaA terminator region was linked to the 3&#39;-end of catR via a naturally-occurring ClaI site downstream of the catalase-R gene stop codon. An XbaI site adjacent to ClaI was incorporated using a synthetic DNA linker and was then used to complete the terminator fusion. This terminator segment, which encodes information necessary for proper polyadenylation and termination of transcription, is the same segment as that which was used for Genencor&#39;s chymosin expression vector (Cullen, et al., 1987 Bio/Technol. 5: 369-376). A restriction fragment containing the A. niger pyrG gene (Wilson, et al., 1988 Nucl. Acids Res. 16: 2339) was subcloned adjacent to the glaA terminator such that the entire glucoamylase-catalase-selectable marker cassette was encoded on a single restriction fragment (the nucleotide sequence of this fragment (EC2L) is given in FIG. 3 (SEQ ID NO:6)). 
     3. Development of A. niger Strains to be Used in the Production of Catalase 
     Features of the A. niger strain used as a host for expression of the glucoamylase-catalase cassette include a) uridine-requiring auxotrophy, specifically a pyrG auxotrophic mutation, b) deletion of the gene encoding glucose oxidase, goxA, and (c) a methionine-requiring auxotrophy, specifically mutation which renders the cells deficient in cystathionase (metC) activity. While the metC marker is not required for high level expression of catalase-R, it was included as a feature of the host strain to satisfy limited survivability regulation of government regulatory agencies. The catalase expression cassette described above was used to transform the A. niger ΔgoxA pyrG metC strain and the resulting transformants were screened in shake flask cultures for their ability to produce high levels of catalase. From these transformants, the highest catalase producers were selected for further study. Shake flask cultures were grown for two days at 33° C. in 50 ml of a liquid medium that was made according to the following recipe: For each liter of medium add maltodextrin [Staley 200, A. E. Staley Co., (100 g)], ammonium sulfate (4 g), calcium chloride (0.4 g), magnesium sulfate (0.6 g), corn steep liquor [Archer Daniels Midland Co., (10 g)], and potassium phosphate (3 g); The volume is brought to 500 ml with distilled water, the pH is adjusted to 7.0, and the solution is autoclaved; Separately a 500 ml solution of 12% calcium carbonate is made in distilled water, the pH is adjusted to 7.0, and the solution autoclaved. The two sterile mixtures were combined aseptically to give one liter of catalase production medium. After two days growth, the mycelia were harvested by filtration (Miracloth, Calbiochem, Inc.), and the cells were rapidly frozen in liquid nitrogen. The cells were disrupted by grinding the frozen pellet in an electric coffee grinder for approximately 60 sec or until a fine powder was obtained. The disrupted cells were resuspended in an extraction buffer that contained 100 mM sodium formate, pH 7, 0.01% sodium dodecylsulfate, and 1 mM each of phenylmethyl sulfonyl fluoride and pepstatin. Insoluble debris was removed by centrifugation at approximately 1500  g, and the activity of soluble catalase in the extract was measured by previously described methods (Patti and Bonet-Maury 1953 Bull Soc. Biol. 35: 1177; Teranishi, et al., 1974 Agric. Biol. Chem. 38: 1213). Specific methods for generation of the catalase production organisms are outlined below. The parental strain for all studies described herein was A. niger FS-1 (NRRL3). 
     Isolation of A. niger FS-1 pyrG Strains 
     5-Fluoro-orotic acid (FOA), a toxic analog of orotic acid, has been used to select uridine-requiring auxotrophs in filamentous fungi and yeasts (VanHartingveldt, et al., 1987 Mol. Gen. Genet. 206: 71-75). Fungal strains deficient in orotidine-5&#39;-monophosphate decarboxylase (pyrG gene product), are resistant to FOA and require exogenous uridine for growth. The A. niger pyrG gene was cloned (Wilson, et al., 1988 Nucl. Acids Res. 16: 2339) and used as a selectable marker for the transformation of pyrG mutant strains. An advantage of using FOA as a positive selection for pyrG auxotrophs is that spontaneous mutants can be selected without need for excessive mutagenesis and screening. The method of selecting A. niger FS-1 pyrG mutants is as follows: Spores of A. niger FS-1 were spread onto the surface of minimal medium plates containing 2 mg/ml uridine and 1.2 mg/ml FOA. Resistant colonies (FOA r ) were evident after 2-3 days growth at 37° C. Spores from six FOA r  colonies were streaked onto fresh medium containing FOA, and isolated colonies were picked for further analysis. Three of the six FOA r  strains were shown to require uridine for growth. To determine which of the uridine-requiring strains had a non-functional pyrG gene, each of the strains was tested for its ability to be transformed (i.e., complemented) with a plasmid containing the A. nidulans pyrG gene. Only one strain, FS-1 pyrG1, gave transformants (an approximate frequency of 10 transformants per μg DNA) indicating that it carried a pyrG mutation. This strain was used for all subsequent experimentation. 
     Generation of A. niger FS-1 ΔgoxA Strains 
     To generate a chromosomal deletion in the goxA gene, a vector was constructed which contained 5&#39;- and 3&#39;-flanking DNA sequences from the goxA gene and a selectable pyrG gene inserted in place of a portion of the goxA coding region (see FIG. 4). For complete information regarding the nucleotide sequence of the goxA gene, consult Frederick, et al., 1990 J. Biol. Chem. 265: 3793-3802 989 and Kriechbaum, et al., 1989 FEBS Lett. 255: 63-66. Briefly, a 4.1 kb ClaI-SmaI fragment comprising the A. niger FS-1 goxA gene was subcloned into a pUC218-derivative (from which the EcoRI site had previously been removed) to give pUC218goxA. The A. niger pyrG gene was isolated from pUC4XL as an EcoRI fragment having 27 bp and 16 bp of pUC4XL polylinker DNA at either end. The goxA coding region was subsequently removed by digestion with EcoRI and the remaining plasmid fragment was ligated with the EcoRI fragment containing the A. niger pyrG gene to create pUC218ΔgoxA. From this plasmid a 4.75 kb SmaI-XbaI restriction fragment which contains 5&#39;- and 3&#39;-flanking regions of the goxA gene with part of the goxA coding sequence removed and replaced with a functional pyrG gene was isolated. Use of this fragment to transform A. niger FS-1 pyrG1 with selection for uridine prototrophy resulted in the isolation of several strains which failed to give a blue color on glucose oxidase indicator plates (Witteveen, et al., 1990 Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 33: 683-686). Southern blotting analysis of genomic DNA extracted from these goxA-deficient transformants indicated that the ΔgoxA::pyrG cassette had integrated via a homologous recombination event at the goxA locus (as diagramed in FIG. 4B). In other words, the selectable pyrG gene had replaced the goxA coding region. 
     As shown in FIG. 5, catalase production in ΔgoxA mutants was approximately three- to six-fold lower than the parental strain FS-1. We interpret these data to indicate that in the absence of glucose oxidase little hydrogen peroxide is generated, and this in turn has an adverse effect on catalase induction. 
     Isolation of A. niger FS-1 ΔgoxA pyrG Strains 
     Spontaneous uridine-requiring mutants of A. niger FS-1 ΔgoxA were selected using FOA as described above. This step was necessary for subsequent transformation of the strain with the pyrG-based EC2 cassette. 
     Isolation of an A. niger FS-1 ΔgoxA pyrG metC Strain 
     In order to limit the survivability of a recombinant catalase production organism in the environment, a methionine-requiring auxotrophy was introduced in the following manner. Spores of A. niger FS-1 ΔgoxA pyrG were mutagenized with UV light (95% killing) and survivors were subjected to filtration enrichment in Aspergillus minimal medium. With this technique, unwanted prototrophs germinate and grow to form mycelia which can be removed by filtration. Auxotrophic cells cannot generate or grow in minimal medium, and therefore pass through porous filters (e.g., Miracloth, Calbiochem, Inc.). After several rounds of filtration and growth, the remaining spores were plated onto complete medium. Colonies were patched from these plates onto minimal medium agar and to fresh complete medium plates. Those which grew on complete medium but not on minimal agar were auxotrophic. From the population of auxotrophs, one colony was identified which grew on minimal medium supplemented with methionine. Upon further testing, it was discovered that the strain was defective in a specific step of the methionine biosynthetic pathway. Growth was supported by the addition of either homocysteine or methionine, but not by either homoserine or cystathionine. Based on the known biosynthetic pathway for methionine, it appears that this methionine-requiring auxotroph was deficient in cystathionase activity, and thus, it was given the designation of metC by convention with other organisms. 
     Transformation of the A. niger FS-1 ΔgoxA pyrG metC Strain and Characterization of Catalase Overproducing Strains 
     The catalase expression cassette (in linear form) was isolated following digestion of the pUC-EC2 plasmid with PmeI and NotI and purification of the EC2 fragment by preparative gel electrophoresis. The purified DNA fragment was then used to transform the A. niger ΔgoxA pyrG metC strain, and prototrophic transformants were screened in shake flask culture for their ability to produce catalase. From approximately fifty transformants screened in shake flasks, ten were identified that produced significantly higher catalase levels than control strains. These ten strains were re-evaluated in duplicate shake flask cultures, and the results of catalase activity assays are shown in FIG. 5. Nine of the ten strains produced significantly higher levels of catalase-R than the parent strain FS-1. Two of the transformants (EC2L-19, EC2L-23) produced catalase yields in shake flask cultures that were roughly ten to fifteen times the level produced by A. niger FS-1, and these strains were chosen for testing under large scale production conditions. Fermentation experiments at the 10 liter and 50,000 liter scale have shown that catalase-R production from transformant EC2L-23 correspond to the level of catalase-R expression seen in shake flask studies. 
     Furthermore, HPLC analyses of organic acids produced during fermentation of A. niger EC2L-23 and the parental strain FS-1 gave the following yields of sodium gluconate: 
     
         ______________________________________Strain        sodium gluconate (mg/L)______________________________________FS-1          &gt;200,000EC2L-23 (run 27)             48EC2L-23 (run 28)             123______________________________________ 
    
     These data show a dramatic decrease in the production of sodium gluconate waste material by transformant EC2L-23. 
     
         __________________________________________________________________________SEQUENCE LISTING(1) GENERAL INFORMATION:(iii) NUMBER OF SEQUENCES: 9(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:1:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 29 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: both(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic)(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:1:GATCAGA TCTGGATCCATCGATAGTCTAG29(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:2:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 17 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: both(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic)(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:2:GATCT CAGCAATGCGTC17(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:3:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 36 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: both(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic)(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:3:AAA ACCGTTTAAACGGCGCGCCTTAATTAAGGAAAA36(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:4:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 3107 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: double(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ix) FEATURE:(A) NAME/KEY: CDS (B) LOCATION: join(327..620, 683..907, 969..1385, 1440..1604,1654..2745)(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:4:CTTGTCACCGAGTGCCCGTTTGTCACTTGTTGTGGTGATCTTGAGCACATCGCGTTCCTC60TCGTCTCATCACATCGAGTGATCAACATTGCATGACCCTAGTGGAGCCCCTTCGTCTCCC120 AACAGGAGGGTCCGGATTACCAAGTCCCGACACCGTTTGGCTGTAATTCGACTCAAATTC180TGGATTCGTAGCTTAACTAAGACGCGTGGTCTGTTAACCGGCCTCGCCATGGATGCCGAT240ATAAGGACCCTAGGGGACTCCCCCCTGGTGACTCTCGTCGGAAGA TCGCAGCACTCTGAA300TTCTCCTAGTCTTCGTTTACTCCGCCATGCGTCATTTCTGGCTTTTGCCAGCT353MetArgHisPheTrpLeuLeuProAla1 5GTTGCTGGTATCGCTGGGGCTCAATGCCCCTACCTGTCGGGTGAAATG401ValAlaGlyIleAlaGlyAlaGlnCysProTyrLeuSerGlyGluMet101520 25AGTTTCACCCAGGAGCAGGACAATGCTGGCGATACCATTGAGGTCACG449SerPheThrGlnGluGlnAspAsnAlaGlyAspThrIleGluValThr303 540GAGCAGCCCATTGACAACACCCTGTATGTCAATGACACCGGTAGCTAC497GluGlnProIleAspAsnThrLeuTyrValAsnAspThrGlySerTyr4550 55ATGACTACCGACTTTGGCACTCCGATCTCCGACCAGACCAGTCTCAAG545MetThrThrAspPheGlyThrProIleSerAspGlnThrSerLeuLys6065 70GCCGGGCCCCGTGGTCCTACCCTGTTGGAGGACTTTATCTTCCGTCAG593AlaGlyProArgGlyProThrLeuLeuGluAspPheIlePheArgGln758085AAGCTTCAGCGGTTCGACCATGAGCGTGTAAGTACAGTAACTGCTGC640LysLeuGlnArgPheAspHisGluArg9095GGTGTGTAGTAACAATAAATTGACCCAGTGGTTTTCAATTAGGTCCCCGAGC GC694ValProGluArg100GTCGTCCACGCCCGTGGTGCCGGTGCATATGGTACTTTCAAATCCTAC 742ValValHisAlaArgGlyAlaGlyAlaTyrGlyThrPheLysSerTyr105110115GCCGACTGGTCGAACGTCACGGCTGCCGATTTCTTGAGTGCCAACGAT79 0AlaAspTrpSerAsnValThrAlaAlaAspPheLeuSerAlaAsnAsp120125130AAGGAGACCCCTATGTTCTGTCGCTTCTCTACTGTGGTCGGTTTCCGT838LysGlu ThrProMetPheCysArgPheSerThrValValGlyPheArg135140145150GGTAGTGTTGACACTGCGCGTGATGTTCACGGTCACGCTTGTCGGTTC886Gly SerValAspThrAlaArgAspValHisGlyHisAlaCysArgPhe155160165TACACTGACGAGGGTAACTATGGTATCTTGATATGGTCACCCAACAATAAT937Ty rThrAspGluGlyAsnTyr170TCAATACATGCTAACAGATATGTCTCTACTAGACATCGTCGGTATCAATTTC989AspIleValGlyIleAsnPhe 175180GCCCCCTTCTTCATCCAGGACGCCATCCAGTTCCCCGATCTTGTCCAC1037AlaProPhePheIleGlnAspAlaIleGlnPheProAspLeuValHis 185190195GCCATCAAGCCCATGCCCAACAATGAGATCCCCCAGGCCGCTACTGCA1085AlaIleLysProMetProAsnAsnGluIleProGlnAlaAlaThrAla 200205210CACACTTCCGCTTGGGACTTCTTCAGCCAGCAGAGCACTGCCCTCCAC1133HisThrSerAlaTrpAspPhePheSerGlnGlnSerThrAlaLeuHis215 220225AGTGCCTTGTGGCTGATGTCTGGTAACGGTATTCCTCGTTCTTTCCGC1181SerAlaLeuTrpLeuMetSerGlyAsnGlyIleProArgSerPheArg230 235240CACATGAACGGCTACGGAGTCCACAGCTTCCGCTTCGTCGCTGCCAAT1229HisMetAsnGlyTyrGlyValHisSerPheArgPheValAlaAlaAsn245250 255260GGCACTTCCAAGGTGGTGCGAACACCTTGGAAGTCCCAACAGGGTGTT1277GlyThrSerLysValValArgThrProTrpLysSerGlnGlnGlyVal265 270275GCCAGTCTGGTGTGGGATGAAGCTCAGGCCGCTGCTGGTAAGAACAGT1325AlaSerLeuValTrpAspGluAlaGlnAlaAlaAlaGlyLysAsnSer280 285290GACTACCACCGCCAGGATCTGTACAATGCGATGCCCAATGGCCACTAC1373AspTyrHisArgGlnAspLeuTyrAsnAlaMetProAsnGlyHisTyr2953 00305CCGAAATACGAGGTCAGCCAATCCCTTGATGTCTATCGATAGAGCCTTTTGC1425ProLysTyrGlu310TGACAATCCCCTAGCTCCAAGCCCAGATCATGGATGAGGCTGACATGCTT1475 LeuGlnAlaGlnIleMetAspGluAlaAspMetLeu315320CGTTTCGGCTTCGACCTTCTGGATCCCACCAAGTTGGTCCCCGAGGAG1523ArgPheGl yPheAspLeuLeuAspProThrLysLeuValProGluGlu325330335340GTTGTCCCTTACACTCCTCTCGGAATGATGGAGCTCAATGCCAACCCC1571ValV alProTyrThrProLeuGlyMetMetGluLeuAsnAlaAsnPro345350355ACCAACTACTTTGCTGAAGTTGAACAGGCTGGTGTATGTATTCCCCATTCATC1624Thr AsnTyrPheAlaGluValGluGlnAlaGly360365AAATGCCAGACATAATCTAACTTCTGCAGTTCCAACCCGGTCACGTCGTTCCT1677PheGlnProGl yHisValValPro370375GGCATTGACTTCACCGACGACCCCCTGCTGCAAGGCCGTCTCTTCTCC1725GlyIleAspPheThrAspAspProLeuLeuG lnGlyArgLeuPheSer380385390TACCTCGACACTCAGTTGACCCGTCACGGCGGTCCCAACTTCGAGCAA1773TyrLeuAspThrGlnLeuThrArgHisGly GlyProAsnPheGluGln395400405ATCCCCGTCAACCGTCCTCGCAAGCCCGTTCACAACAACAACCGTGAC1821IleProValAsnArgProArgLysProValHis AsnAsnAsnArgAsp410415420GGCTTCGGCCAGCAGCAGATCCCCACCAACAACTGGGCCTACACCCCC1869GlyPheGlyGlnGlnGlnIleProThrAsnAsnTrpAl aTyrThrPro425430435AACAGCATGAGCAACGGTTACCCCATGCAAGCCAACCAGACCCAGGGT1917AsnSerMetSerAsnGlyTyrProMetGlnAlaAsnGlnThrGlnG ly440445450455CATGGTTTCTTCACCGCGCCCTACCGCTACGCTTCCGGCCATCTCGTC1965HisGlyPhePheThrAlaProTyrArgTyrAlaSerGlyHis LeuVal460465470CGCCAGACCAGCCCGACCTTCAATGACCACTGGTCCCAGCCCGCCATG2013ArgGlnThrSerProThrPheAsnAspHisTrpSerGlnPro AlaMet475480485TTCTGGAACTCTCTGATCCCCGCTGAGCAGCAGATGGTTGTCAACGCC2061PheTrpAsnSerLeuIleProAlaGluGlnGlnMetValValAs nAla490495500ATTGTCTTTGAGAACTCCAAGGTTAACAGCCCCCACGTTCGGAAGAAC2109IleValPheGluAsnSerLysValAsnSerProHisValArgLysAsn 505510515GTTGTCAACCAGCTGAACATGGTCAACAACAACCTCGCCGTCCGTGTC2157ValValAsnGlnLeuAsnMetValAsnAsnAsnLeuAlaValArgVal520 525530535GCTCGTGGTCTTGGTCTCGATGAGCCCTCCCCCAACCCGACTTACTAC2205AlaArgGlyLeuGlyLeuAspGluProSerProAsnProThrTyrTyr 540545550ACCTCCAACAAGACCTCCAACGTCGGTACCTTCGGCAAGCCCCTCCTC2253ThrSerAsnLysThrSerAsnValGlyThrPheGlyLysProLeuLeu 555560565AGCATCGAGGGTCTGCAGGTCGGCTTCCTGGCCTCGAACTCCCACCCC2301SerIleGluGlyLeuGlnValGlyPheLeuAlaSerAsnSerHisPro 570575580GAATCCATCAAGCAGGGCCAGGCCATGGCCGCGCAGTTCTCTGCCGCT2349GluSerIleLysGlnGlyGlnAlaMetAlaAlaGlnPheSerAlaAla585 590595GGCGTCGACCTGAACATTGTCACCGAGGCCTACGCCGATGGTGTCAAC2397GlyValAspLeuAsnIleValThrGluAlaTyrAlaAspGlyValAsn600605 610615ACCACCTACGCCCTGTCTGATGCCATCGACTTTGACGCCCTCATCATC2445ThrThrTyrAlaLeuSerAspAlaIleAspPheAspAlaLeuIleIle620 625630GCCGATGGTGTGCAGAGCCTCTTCGCCTCCCCCGCTCTCGCTAACCAG2493AlaAspGlyValGlnSerLeuPheAlaSerProAlaLeuAlaAsnGln635 640645ATGAACTCTACCGCCACCTCTACTCTCTACCCTCCTGCCAGACCTTTC2541MetAsnSerThrAlaThrSerThrLeuTyrProProAlaArgProPhe650 655660CAGATCCTGGTCGATTCTTTCAGGTACGGTAAGCCCGTGGCTGCTGTC2589GlnIleLeuValAspSerPheArgTyrGlyLysProValAlaAlaVal665670 675GGCAGTGGCAGTGTTGCGCTCAAGAACGCTGGTATTGATTCCTCCCGC2637GlySerGlySerValAlaLeuLysAsnAlaGlyIleAspSerSerArg6806856 90695TCTGGTGTGTACACTGGCTCGAGCGAGACGACGGAGAAGATCGCCAAG2685SerGlyValTyrThrGlySerSerGluThrThrGluLysIleAlaLys700 705710GAGGTCTTGGAGGGACTCTACACTTTCCGTTTTGTGGACCGGTTTGCG2733GluValLeuGluGlyLeuTyrThrPheArgPheValAspArgPheAla715720 725CTGGATGAGTAAGGGTATCACGTTTGTACTTGTACTCACGTTCATCGTT2782LeuAspGlu730TGTGATGATACATTGATTGATCGATAGATATTTTGTGAGATAGATAGAGTATACTAGAGW2842G KACATATCTCTACTGATGAGGTGTTGTGCTGCTGCAACACATATTTATGAATATATATT2902CTCTTCTTTGTGAAAGCTAGCCTTCTATATAATCAGCAATGGTTAACTCTTCCAATTCTA2962TAGATACCAATCACCTAACCCACTCGGAATGACGACAGAAAACATCG ACATGTTCGCCCA3022AGTAAAGCTACTTGAACTTCTACATTTATGCTATGCTGGAGTCCTCTCATAAGTCCAGAA3082TAAACAAAGAGATCCGATCCTGCTC3107(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:5:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: (A) LENGTH: 730 amino acids(B) TYPE: amino acid(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:5:MetArgHisPheTrpLeuLeuProAlaValAlaGlyIleAlaGlyAla1510 15GlnCysProTyrLeuSerGlyGluMetSerPheThrGlnGluGlnAsp202530AsnAlaGlyAspThrIleGluValThrGluGlnProIleAspAsnThr 354045LeuTyrValAsnAspThrGlySerTyrMetThrThrAspPheGlyThr505560ProIleSerAspGlnThrSerLeuL ysAlaGlyProArgGlyProThr65707580LeuLeuGluAspPheIlePheArgGlnLysLeuGlnArgPheAspHis85 9095GluArgValProGluArgValValHisAlaArgGlyAlaGlyAlaTyr100105110GlyThrPheLysSerTyrAlaAspTrpSerAsnValThr AlaAlaAsp115120125PheLeuSerAlaAsnAspLysGluThrProMetPheCysArgPheSer130135140ThrValValGlyPh eArgGlySerValAspThrAlaArgAspValHis145150155160GlyHisAlaCysArgPheTyrThrAspGluGlyAsnTyrAspIleVal165 170175GlyIleAsnPheAlaProPhePheIleGlnAspAlaIleGlnPhePro180185190AspLeuValHisAlaIleLysProMetP roAsnAsnGluIleProGln195200205AlaAlaThrAlaHisThrSerAlaTrpAspPhePheSerGlnGlnSer210215220Thr AlaLeuHisSerAlaLeuTrpLeuMetSerGlyAsnGlyIlePro225230235240ArgSerPheArgHisMetAsnGlyTyrGlyValHisSerPheArgPhe 245250255ValAlaAlaAsnGlyThrSerLysValValArgThrProTrpLysSer260265270GlnGlnGlyValAlaSe rLeuValTrpAspGluAlaGlnAlaAlaAla275280285GlyLysAsnSerAspTyrHisArgGlnAspLeuTyrAsnAlaMetPro290295 300AsnGlyHisTyrProLysTyrGluLeuGlnAlaGlnIleMetAspGlu305310315320AlaAspMetLeuArgPheGlyPheAspLeuLeuAspProThrL ysLeu325330335ValProGluGluValValProTyrThrProLeuGlyMetMetGluLeu340345350AsnAla AsnProThrAsnTyrPheAlaGluValGluGlnAlaGlyPhe355360365GlnProGlyHisValValProGlyIleAspPheThrAspAspProLeu370 375380LeuGlnGlyArgLeuPheSerTyrLeuAspThrGlnLeuThrArgHis385390395400GlyGlyProAsnPheGluGlnIleProValAs nArgProArgLysPro405410415ValHisAsnAsnAsnArgAspGlyPheGlyGlnGlnGlnIleProThr420425 430AsnAsnTrpAlaTyrThrProAsnSerMetSerAsnGlyTyrProMet435440445GlnAlaAsnGlnThrGlnGlyHisGlyPhePheThrAlaProTyrArg450 455460TyrAlaSerGlyHisLeuValArgGlnThrSerProThrPheAsnAsp465470475480HisTrpSerGlnProAlaMet PheTrpAsnSerLeuIleProAlaGlu485490495GlnGlnMetValValAsnAlaIleValPheGluAsnSerLysValAsn500505 510SerProHisValArgLysAsnValValAsnGlnLeuAsnMetValAsn515520525AsnAsnLeuAlaValArgValAlaArgGlyLeuGlyLeuAspGl uPro530535540SerProAsnProThrTyrTyrThrSerAsnLysThrSerAsnValGly545550555560ThrPheGly LysProLeuLeuSerIleGluGlyLeuGlnValGlyPhe565570575LeuAlaSerAsnSerHisProGluSerIleLysGlnGlyGlnAlaMet580 585590AlaAlaGlnPheSerAlaAlaGlyValAspLeuAsnIleValThrGlu595600605AlaTyrAlaAspGlyValAsnThrThrTyrAla LeuSerAspAlaIle610615620AspPheAspAlaLeuIleIleAlaAspGlyValGlnSerLeuPheAla625630635640SerProAlaLeuAlaAsnGlnMetAsnSerThrAlaThrSerThrLeu645650655TyrProProAlaArgProPheGlnIleLeuValAspSerPheArgTyr 660665670GlyLysProValAlaAlaValGlySerGlySerValAlaLeuLysAsn675680685AlaGlyIleAspSerSerArg SerGlyValTyrThrGlySerSerGlu690695700ThrThrGluLysIleAlaLysGluValLeuGluGlyLeuTyrThrPhe705710715 720ArgPheValAspArgPheAlaLeuAspGlu725730(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:6:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 8533 base pairs(B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: double(D) TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic)(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:6:GCGGCCGCCTCGAGGATTGTCTGAACATTGACATTCGGCGCCCAGCGAACCCCAACTGCG60GACGCGAATGCCCGTGCTGGTCTCGGATCTTTGGCGGAGGCTTTGAACTTGGTTCAAAGG120CCATGTATGACGGCACAACG ATGGTATCATCGTCGATAGACAAGAATATGCCTATCGTGT180TTGTAGCGATGAACTATCGCGTAGGGGGCTTCGGGTTTCTGCCCGGAAAGGAGATTCTGG240AGGACGGGTCCGCCAACTTAGGTCTTTGACCAAGCCTTGCCCTAGTGGGTGGCCGACAAC300ATCGAGGCGTTTGGTGGAGACCAGACAAGGTGACAATCTGGGGAGAATCAGCAGGGGCTA360TTTCTGTCTTGATCAGATGATCTGTACGACGGAAACATCGCTTACAAGGACAAGCCCTTG420TTTCGGGAGCCATCATGGACTCCGGTATGTGTTCCCGCAGACC CTGTCGACGGGGTCAAG480GGATCAGCAAGTATATGATGCGGTTGTGGACTCTGCAGGCTGTTCCTCTTCCAACGACAC540CCTGGCTTGTCTGCGTGAGCTAGACTACACCGACTATCTCAATGCGGCAAACTCGTGCCG600GGGATCCTAGGTTATCACCG TGGCGCTATCATATGTGCCTCGACCAGACGGGACGGCATT660TGTCGGCGTCGCCAGATTTTGGGTAAAGCAGGGAAGTATGCGCGGGTCCCATTCATCGTG720GGCGACCAAGAGGATGAGGGGACCTTGTTCGCCTTGTTTCAGTCCTTACGACGATCGACG780AGGTAGTCGACTATCTGGGCACCTACTTCTTCTATGACGCTAGCCAGGAGCAGCTTGAAG840AATTAGTGGCCCTGTACCCAGACACCACCACATATGGGTCTCCCTTCAGGACGGGCAGGC900CAACAACTGGTATCCGCAATTTAAGCGATTGGCCGCCATTCTC GGCGACTTGGTCTTCAC960CATTACCCGGCGGCATTCCTGTCATATGCAGAGGAGCTCTCCCCTGACCTCCCGAAATGG1020TCGTACCTGGCGACCTATGACTATGGCAGCCAATTCTGGGGACCTTCCATGGAAGTGACC1080TGCTGCAGGTGTTCTATGGG ATCAAGCCGAACTATGCAGCGAGTTCCAGCCACACGTATT1140ATCTGAGTTTTGTATACACGCTGGATCCGAACTCCAATCGGGGGGAGTACATGGAATGGC1200CCCAGTGGCAGCCGACAGTTGATGAATTTCGGAGCGAACAGCAGTCTCCTTACGGATGAT1260TTCCGCAACGGGACATATGAGTTCATCCTGCAGAATACCGCGGCGTTCCACATCTGATGC1320CATTCGGGAGGGGTCCGGAGGTCAGGGACTAGCCTTATGAACGTAATGATGGAAGTGTCT1380GGCCTCGGCAAAGGATATATAGGGTCATAATAAGTAGTACTAG TTATATTAATGGAAGGG1440TATATACCACGCGTTGGACCTTGGGACCTGCATTATAGCTTCCCGTTAGGTATAATTACC1500GTTGTTATAGCAGCCAATCAAGCCACCACGCTCGACCGGGGGACGGCGAATCCCCGGGAA1560TTGAAATAAATTGCAATTCA GGTCAATGCGGCCAGCGATTGGACACATCTCCAAGGCACA1620GGGCCATTCTGCAGTGCCGGGGATTCAGTGCATTCCCCCGGGCCGGGCCCGACACGCGAT1680AGGCTGGTTCTTCCACACCACCGGAGATTCGTCGTTCTGAAGAGCTGAAGTGGCGAGATG1740GTCTCTGCAGGAATTCAAGCTAGATGCTAAGCGATATTGCATGGCAATATGTGTTGATGC1800ATGTGCTTCTTCCTTCAGCTTCCCCTCGTGCAGATGAAGGTTTGGCTATAAATTGAAGTG1860GTTGGTCGGGGGTTCCGTGAGGGGCTGAAGTGCTTCCTCCCTT TTAGACGCAACTGAGAG1920CCTGAGCTTCATCCCCAGCATCATTAGATCTCAGCAATGCGTCATTTCTGGCTTTTGCCA1980GCTGTTGCTGGTATCGCTGGGGCTCAATGCCCCTACCTGTCGGGTGAAATGAGTTTCACC2040CAGGAGCAGGACAATGCTGG CGATACCATTGAGGTCACGGAGCAGCCCATTGACAACACC2100CTGTATGTCAATGACACCGGTAGCTACATGACTACCGACTTTGGCACTCCGATCTCCGAC2160CAGACCAGTCTCAAGGCCGGGCCCCGTGGTCCTACCCTGTTGGAGGACTTTATCTTCCGT2220CAGAAGCTTCAGCGGTTCGACCATGAGCGTGTAAGTACAGTAACTGCTGCGGTGTGTAGT2280AACAATAAATTGACCCAGTGGTTTTCAATTAGGTCCCCGAGCGCGTCGTCCACGCCCGTG2340GTGCCGGTGCATATGGTACTTTCAAATCCTACGCCGACTGGTC GAACGTCACGGCTGCCG2400ATTTCTTGAGTGCCAACGATAAGGAGACCCCTATGTTCTGTCGCTTCTCTACTGTGGTCG2460GTTTCCGTGGTAGTGTTGACACTGCGCGTGATGTTCACGGTCACGCTTGTCGGTTCTACA2520CTGACGAGGGTAACTATGGT ATCTTGATATGGTCACCCAACAATAATTCAATACATGCTA2580ACAGATATGTCTCTACTAGACATCGTCGGTATCAATTTCGCCCCCTTCTTCATCCAGGAC2640GCCATCCAGTTCCCCGATCTTGTCCACGCCATCAAGCCCATGCCCAACAATGAGATCCCC2700CAGGCCGCTACTGCACACACTTCCGCTTGGGACTTCTTCAGCCAGCAGAGCACTGCCCTC2760CACAGTGCCTTGTGGCTGATGTCTGGTAACGGTATTCCTCGTTCTTTCCGCCACATGAAC2820GGCTACGGAGTCCACAGCTTCCGCTTCGTCGCTGCCAATGGCA CTTCCAAGGTGGTGCGA2880ACACCTTGGAAGTCCCAACAGGGTGTTGCCAGTCTGGTGTGGGATGAAGCTCAGGCCGCT2940GCTGGTAAGAACAGTGACTACCACCGCCAGGATCTGTACAATGCGATGCCCAATGGCCAC3000TACCCGAAATACGAGGTCAG CCAATCCCTTGATGTCTATCGATAGAGCCTTTTGCTGACA3060ATCCCCTAGCTCCAAGCCCAGATCATGGATGAGGCTGACATGCTTCGTTTCGGCTTCGAC3120CTTCTGGATCCCACCAAGTTGGTCCCCGAGGAGGTTGTCCCTTACACTCCTCTCGGAATG3180ATGGAGCTCAATGCCAACCCCACCAACTACTTTGCTGAAGTTGAACAGGCTGGTGTATGT3240ATTCCCCATTCATCAAATGCCAGACATAATCTAACTTCTGCAGTTCCAACCCGGTCACGT3300CGTTCCTGGCATTGACTTCACCGACGACCCCCTGCTGCAAGGC CGTCTCTTCTCCTACCT3360CGACACTCAGTTGACCCGTCACGGCGGTCCCAACTTCGAGCAAATCCCCGTCAACCGTCC3420TCGCAAGCCCGTTCACAACAACAACCGTGACGGCTTCGGCCAGCAGCAGATCCCCACCAA3480CAACTGGGCCTACACCCCCA ACAGCATGAGCAACGGTTACCCCATGCAAGCCAACCAGAC3540CCAGGGTCATGGTTTCTTCACCGCGCCCTACCGCTACGCTTCCGGCCATCTCGTCCGCCA3600GACCAGCCCGACCTTCAATGACCACTGGTCCCAGCCCGCCATGTTCTGGAACTCTCTGAT3660CCCCGCTGAGCAGCAGATGGTTGTCAACGCCATTGTCTTTGAGAACTCCAAGGTTAACAG3720CCCCCACGTTCGGAAGAACGTTGTCAACCAGCTGAACATGGTCAACAACAACCTCGCCGT3780CCGTGTCGCTCGTGGTCTTGGTCTCGATGAGCCCTCCCCCAAC CCGACTTACTACACCTC3840CAACAAGACCTCCAACGTCGGTACCTTCGGCAAGCCCCTCCTCAGCATCGAGGGTCTGCA3900GGTCGGCTTCCTGGCCTCGAACTCCCACCCCGAATCCATCAAGCAGGGCCAGGCCATGGC3960CGCGCAGTTCTCTGCCGCTG GCGTCGACCTGAACATTGTCACCGAGGCCTACGCCGATGG4020TGTCAACACCACCTACGCCCTGTCTGATGCCATCGACTTTGACGCCCTCATCATCGCCGA4080TGGTGTGCAGAGCCTCTTCGCCTCCCCCGCTCTCGCTAACCAGATGAACTCTACCGCCAC4140CTCTACTCTCTACCCTCCTGCCAGACCTTTCCAGATCCTGGTCGATTCTTTCAGGTACGG4200TAAGCCCGTGGCTGCTGTCGGCAGTGGCAGTGTTGCGCTCAAGAACGCTGGTATTGATTC4260CTCCCGCTCTGGTGTGTACACTGGCTCGAGCGAGACGACGGAG AAGATCGCCAAGGAGGT4320CTTGGAGGGACTCTACACTTTCCGTTTTGTGGACCGGTTTGCGCTGGATGAGTAAGGGTA4380TCACGTTTGTACTTGTACTCACGTTCATCGTTTGTGATGATACATTGATTGATCGATAGT4440CTAGAGTCGACCGCGACGGT GACCGACACCTGGCGGTAGACTATTTATTCCTGTTGATAT4500GAAGGATGAGCATGAGGGTAATTGCTCATATAATCATGTATGTAGTGGATGTGCATAAGA4560GCAACGAAATGGAAGCCTGATCATGTGATTGTATTGCGACCGACGGAAATTGAGGATATG4620CGGAGATACGGACAGTGCCAGAGCCATTGTCTTCACGTAAAGTACCAGACGGTCCCTGAT4680TTCTTCTTGCACATAGCATTAGGCAATTGACATGTTGTCGCTCTACTGATATCACTGTCC4740CTCAAAGCATAGCCATGAGCTCATCTTAGATCCAAGCACGTAA TTCCATAGCCGAGGTCC4800ACAGTGGAGCAACAGCAGCATCCATCATTGCTTCTCCCCCAGGGGCCTCTTAGCGACTAA4860ACCTGGAGTATGTCTCAACCAGCCAATGAATCGTCTTCGCTTCAATGTCCTTGACACTTC4920TGAGAGGGTCCCCATCCCTC AATGCTAATTCAAAATATAGCCGAGATGCATGGTGGAGTC4980CAAAGTAGACAGTATTGCCGGAATGACGGGGCCAGTTGCGCCGAGGTCATTGGCCGGCTG5040TGATGCCATCTGCCACTAAATCCGATCATTGATCCACCGCCCACGAGGGCCGTCTTTGCT5100TTTGCGCTGCGTCCAGGTTCACACATCTCTCTCTCTGCAGCTCCAGACTGACCAGACTAT5160TCTACTTACTGGTCTGATCGGCTCCATCAGAGCTATGGCGTTATCCCGTGCCGTTGCTGC5220GCCATCGCTATCTTGATCGCGAGCTCGAACTCACTTCTTGTTT TAATAGTTGTTCTCGGT5280GACTGAGTGTCGGTGAGTGACAGACCACAACACCATTGTTGCAGGGGGTAAATTTATTCA5340ATTCAGGAATTGGATTGTTCGTCCCGCCATGATGTTCTTGCCGGCTTTGTTGGCCCTGTT5400TGTCGGATGCGACGCCCTCG CTGTGCAGCAGGCAGGTACTGCTGGATGATGAGCCGTCGG5460TCTCCGCGCGCAAGCCTAACTTCCTCTTCATTCTTACGGATGATCAGGATCTGCAGATCG5520AATTCCACCGGCGTATATGCCGTATACACAGGCGAGAATCAAGGAGAAGGGTACTGAGTT5580TTGAATCATTTGTTACTACTGGCTCTGTGCTGTCCGTCGCGCGTGAGTCTTTGGACGGAA5640GACAGGCTCATAATACTAATGTGACGGATGTGAACCCGCCTTATGGTATGAATACCTCTC5700AGATCGGTCATGTTTCTTCGGTGTAAAATTGCTAATGCAGCAT AGGCGGATACCCCAAGT5760TCGTCGCCCAAGGCTTCAACGAAAACTTCCTCCCCGTTTGGCTGCAGTCCGCCGGTTACA5820ATACCTTCTACACGGGGAAACTGTTCAACTGCCACAGCGTCGCTACCTATAATGCACCGT5880TTGTGAACGGCTTCAATGGC TCTGATTTCCTCCTCGATCCCCACACCTATTCCTACTGGA5940ACGCGACGTACCAACGAAACCATGAGCCTCCGCGGAGCTACGAGGGACAATACACAACGG6000ATGTGATGCGGGAGAAGGCATCGGGGTTGTTGGCAGATGCGCTGGACAGGACGCGCCGTT6060CTTCTGACGGTGCCTATCCGCCGCACACGAACATCGATAAGCTTATCACCGTCCCTTATC6120AGCCACCCGTCGCCATTTGCTCTACGCAAGAGTTACAGGACTAAGTACTTCGCAGCCTGC6180TTATCTGCATCAAATCGTCGTACCGCATTAATCCCGTGCCACC CTATAATAGCCTGCAGG6240ATCAATACCGTTTTGACATCCGATGCCGCAGTCTGACTACCCGTGCTCGACATTAGTTTG6300TATGCGTATCGTAGCGGCAAGTTGCATTTCTATATCATTCATAACCATCAAAACTTTTTT6360CCTCATTTTATAGTATTAGT TTCCGCCGACACGGGCCAGGTACGCCTCCCAACCTTCCTT6420CTGGTACTGTTGCGCAGCCTGCACCGGGTCCGGCGCGGCGTAGATACCGCGACCCGCGAT6480AATGAAGTCAGCACCCCGACCGATAGCCGATGCGGGAGTCTGGTACTGCTGACCGAGCTT6540ATCTCCCTTGGACGAAATGTTCACACCAGTCGTGAAGACCACAAAGTCCTCCTCATCCGA6600AGGAGAGCTGACTTCCGACTGCACCTCACCCAACGAGCGGGTCGACACAAATCCCATGAC6660GAAGTTCTTGTATTTCCGGGCATAATCAACCGAAGAAGTAGTG TACTGGCCGGTGGCCAA6720GGAACCCTTAGAGGTCATTTCCGCCAAGATCAACAGACCACGTTCGGGGCCGTAGGAGAA6780GTCCGGTGCAGACGCCGTCTGAGCGAGAGCCTCGACGATACCCTCGCCAGGCAGGATGCT6840GCAGTTGATGATATGGGCCC ATTCTGAGATGCGGAGGGTACCACGGTGGTATTGCTTCTG6900GACAGTGTTGCCAATGTCGATGAATTTGCGGTCCTCGAAGATGAGGAAGTTGTGCTTCTG6960CGCAAGAGCCTTGAGGCCCTCAATGGTCTCGTCGCTGAAGTCAGAGAGGATATCGATGTG7020GGTTTTGATCACGGCGATGTAGGGACCGAGACCTCAGTCCGGTATCACCGTTAATAAGTT7080TGTATGCAGCATAAACAGGCAGAATGGCGGGTCGGCCTACGGTCAGCAAGATCTAGTAGC7140TCCTTAGTGGTGGTAACGTCGGCAGAGACGGTCACATTGGTCT TCTTGGCCTCAGCAATT7200TCGAACAGCCGCTTGGCCAGAGCATTGGGGTGCTTGCTGGCACGGGCAGTGTAGGTCAAT7260TGCGACTTGGAGGACATGGTGTCGGTGGAGGGGTTAATGCGGGGATGAAAGAGGCTTGTG7320CAATATGAGTAGCTTGGAGT TTCGACTGATAGGCCCTAATTGGTAGATCCAGAGATGCGC7380AAATACTACCGAATAATTTAGCAGCGACTGGCCCTTATATGAGGTGAACAATGCACATTC7440AATGTCGAGCAAAAGAGGAGCTCAGTAAATCATCGCGACCCTCCACGCACCAGCCACATC7500GGGTGATTTCGCCGCCTCCGACCGGAACCGTGGGGTTCAGCCACACCTGCAAAGGCAGTT7560CCTTTCCATTGAAGTTGCCACACCCAGGTTCATTGGAGCTCGTATTTTTCCCTGCTGCAC7620ATGGGGAAATAGACCAGCTCAATCAGAAAGCCATTGTCATTCC CGACCCTAGCAGTACGC7680ATAGTAAACGCGTCGTGGAGTAGTAATATACAAGTGAGAAATTTATTACATATAGCGTGG7740TATAGCCAACAGCGCCAATCACACCCGACGGAAGTCAATCCAAACTTTAAAAGGTAGGGA7800AATCAACTCCCTCGCGACTT CCAAAAGAGGTCAATCCCCAAAGAGCTCCCTGTGCAAGCA7860AGTAGAAGCTGCCGTACAACCGGACCGACCCCGGCTTGCCGGAGTACACGTATCCGTAAA7920GGAACAGTGAGCGACCGAGAACCCAAATGCTTCCAAGGCCAGTTGCCAACTGGGGGTACT7980TCAATCCAGCCACCAGGATGAAGAGCATAGTTTGGCTGGAGTTCTCAAGGAAGTTGGCAT8040GAGCGTGAGCGAGTTAACTGCTCAGCCTTGGGCTGCACGATTGGAATGTATGTTAGCTCG8100AGGAATCTTGTCCGTCTGAGGTTGGTAGGTTGGCTTACGTTGT CTTGCACTGCACTACGG8160TCGCATAGCAGTGAGGGTAGGGGCAATCGGCGTTCTTACGGAGACGAGACACGACGGCGC8220CATGGACGAAGCTCAGGACGGGGATGGCGCCCAGAGCGACGGCAATGACAGAGCTGCAGG8280ATGATTAGCATCAGACTATA TGGGACCTAATGGCATTGTTTGCAGGGATTGTGGAATTGG8340CACATACCCGTAGTTTTCAGGGACGGTCAGAGTAAGCATGGTGAGATATTAACTTGTAGT8400GTTTTCAATTTGAATCTGCTATGACTAGGCGGTATTGGGAAGTCTAGAAGAAGCCGAAAG8460TGATTCAATTTATATAATCGGCGATTGATGGGGCGCAAGAGCGCGATGCGGATCCGGCCA8520AAACCGTTTAAAC8533(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:7:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 39 base pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic)(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:7:ATGTTCTGGAACAGCCTGATCCCCGCCGAGCAGCAGATG39(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:8:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 39 base pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic)(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:8:ATGTTCTGGAACTCCCTGATCCCCGCCGAGCAGCAGATG39(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:9:(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:(A) LENGTH: 39 base pairs (B) TYPE: nucleic acid(C) STRANDEDNESS: single(D) TOPOLOGY: linear(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (genomic)(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:9:ATGTTCTGGAACAGCTTGATCCCCGCCGAGCAGCAGATG39