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1.
Summary Human DNA contains 300 nucleotide interspersed repeated sequences which mostly belong to a single family of sequences called the Alu family. This work examines the evolution of this family of sequences in primates. Bonnet monkey (Macaque radiata) DNA contains a predominant family of 300 nucleotide repeats which has nearly the same restriction map as the human Alu family and which hybridizes to human Alu family repeats under Southern blotting conditions. Prosimian (Galago crassicaudatus pangeniesis) DNA also contains a prominent group of 300 nucleotide long repeated sequences which does not have the same restriction sites as the human Alu family but which does hybridize to the human Alu family under reduced stringency conditions.  相似文献   

2.
The dominant family of interspersed repetitive DNA sequences in the human genome has been termed the Alu family. We have found that more than 75% of the lambda phage in a recombinant library representing an African green monkey genome hybridize with a human Alu sequence under stringent conditions. A group of clones selected from the monkey library with probes other than the Alu sequence were analyzed for the presence and distribution of Alu family sequences. The analyses confirm the abundance of Alu sequences and demonstrate that more than one repeat unit is present in some phages. In the clones studied, the Alu units are separated by an average of 8 kilobase pairs of unrelated sequences. The nucleotide sequence of one monkey Alu sequence is reported and shown to resemble the human Alu sequences closely. Hence, the sequence, dispersion pattern, and copy number of the Alu family members are very similar in the African green monkey and human genomes. Among the clones investigated were two that contain segments of the satellite DNA term alpha-component joined to non alpha-component DNA. The experiments indicate that in the monkey genome Alu sequences can occur close to regions of alpha-component DNA.  相似文献   

3.
Computer analyses of the 3'-flanking DNA sequence of the human elastase I gene revealed a significant degree of similarity with seven human gene sequences in the GenBank and EMBL databases. Genomic Southern analysis indicates that the shared nucleotide sequences are a primate-specific family of short interspersed elements. These elements are members of MER1 sequences (medium reiteration frequency sequences). The consensus sequence of MER1 repeats spans 543 nucleotides and contains several inverted repeats. Since the copy number of MER1 elements seems to be much smaller than that of Alu and L1 repeats, MER1 elements may provide useful landmarks marks for human genome mapping.  相似文献   

4.
C A Fields  D L Grady  R K Moyzis 《Genomics》1992,13(2):431-436
Fifteen examples of the transposon-like human element (THE) LTR and thirteen examples of the MstII interspersed repeat are aligned to generate new consensus sequences for these human repetitive elements. The consensus sequences of these elements are very similar, indicating that they compose subfamilies of a single human interspersed repetitive sequence family. Members of this highly polymorphic repeat family have been mapped to at least 11 chromosomes. Seven examples of the THE internal sequence are also aligned to generate a new consensus sequence for this element. Estimates of the abundance of this repetitive sequence family, derived from both hybridization analysis and frequency of occurrence in GenBank, indicate that THE-LTR/MstII sequences are present every 100-3000 kb in human DNA. The widespread occurrence of members of this family makes them useful landmarks, like Alu, L1, and (GT)n repeats, for physical and genetic mapping of human DNA.  相似文献   

5.
E Ullu  S Murphy  M Melli 《Cell》1982,29(1):195-202
We have cloned and sequenced a cDNA copy of in vitro-polyadenylated 7SL RNA of HeLa cells. The cloned fragment is 303 bp long and has a composite structure. A central block of 140 bp is homologous to a new set of human middle-repetitive sequences. This block appears to be inserted in an Alu consensus sequence, 100 bp from the 5' end and 40 bp from the 3' end of the Alu monomer. Two 6 bp direct repeats are found at the junction between the Alu flanking sequences and the central element. The analysis of several clones shows the existence of sequence microheterogeneity in the 5' portion of the molecule. The 7L DNA probably represents a subset of the Alu family of DNA, highly conserved in evolution.  相似文献   

6.
Chromosome-specific subfamilies within human alphoid repetitive DNA   总被引:21,自引:0,他引:21  
Nucleotide sequence data of about 20 X 10(3) base-pairs of the human tandemly repeated alphoid DNA are presented. The DNA sequences were determined from 45 clones containing EcoRI fragments of alphoid DNA isolated from total genomic DNA. Thirty of the clones contained a complete 340 base-pair dimer unit of the repeat. The remaining clones contained alphoid DNA with fragment lengths of 311, 296, 232, 170 and 108 base-pairs. The sequences obtained were compared with an average alphoid DNA sequence determined by Wu & Manuelidis (1980). The divergences ranged from 0.6 to 24.6% nucleotide changes for the first monomer and from 0 to 17.8% for the second monomer of the repeat. On the basis of identical nucleotide changes at corresponding positions, the individual repeat units could be shown to belong to one of several distinct subfamilies. The number of nucleotide changes defining a subfamily generally constitutes the majority of nucleotide changes found in a member of that subfamily. From an evaluation of the proportion of the total amount of alphoid DNA, which is represented by the clones studied, it is estimated that the number of subfamilies of this repeat may be equal to or exceed the number of chromosomes. The expected presence of only one or a few distinct subfamilies on individual chromosomes is supported by the study, also presented, of the nucleotide sequence of 17 cloned fragments of alphoid repetitive DNA from chromosome 7. These chromosome-specific repeats all contain the characteristic pattern of 36 common nucleotide changes that defines one of the subfamilies described. A unique restriction endonuclease (NlaIII) cleavage site present in this subfamily may be useful as a genetic marker of this chromosome. A family member of the interspersed Alu repetitive DNA was also isolated and sequenced. This Alu repeat has been inserted into the human alphoid repetitive DNA, in the same way as the insertion of an Alu repeat into the African green monkey alphoid DNA.  相似文献   

7.
We have identified and sequenced two members of a chicken middle repetitive DNA sequence family. By reassociation kinetics, members of this family (termed CRl) are estimated to be present in 1500-7000 copies per chicken haploid genome. The first family member sequenced (CRlUla) is located approximately 2 kb upstream from the previously cloned chicken Ul RNA gene. The second CRl sequence (CRl)Va) is located approximately 12 kb downstream from the 3' end of the chicken ovalbumin gene. The region of homology between these two sequences extends over a region of approximately 160 base pairs. In each case, the 160 base pair region is flanked by imperfect, but homologous, short direct repeats 10-15 base pairs in length. When the CRl sequences are compared with mammalian ubiquitous interspersed repetitive DNA sequences (human Alu and Mouse Bl families), several regions of extensive homology are evident. In addition, the short nucleotide sequence CAGCCTGG which is completely conserved in ubiquitous repetitive sequence families from several mammalian species is also conserved at a homologous position in the chicken sequences. These data imply that at least certain aspects of the sequence and structure of these interspersed repeats must predate the avian-mammalian divergence. It seems that the CRl family may possibly represent an avian counterpart of the mammalian ubiquitous repeats.  相似文献   

8.
A cloned EcoRI fragment containing human 18 S rRNA gene sequences was used to screen a gene library to obtain a set of 8 overlapping cloned DNA segments extending into the non-transcribed spacer region of the human ribosomal RNA gene cluster. 19.4 kb of the approx. 43-kb rDNA repeat was obtained in cloned form and mapped with restriction endonucleases. None of the clones obtained extended into 28 S rRNA sequences. A 7-kb region of non-transcribed spacer DNA shared in common between five independent clones was subjected to comparative restriction digests. It was estimated that sequences among the five different spacer isolated varied by not more than 1.0%, if all the observed differences are assumed due to point mutation. HaeII-restriction fragments from within this same 7-kb region contain sequences carried not only within the tandem repeats of the gene cluster but interspersed elsewhere in the genome. Some of these sequences correspond to the Alu family of highly repeated interspersed sequences.  相似文献   

9.
Details of the general DNA sequence organization in the dinoflagellate Crypthecodinium cohnii have been obtained by using hydroxylapatite binding experiments, S1 nuclease digestion .and electron microscopy of reassociated DNA. It has been found that roughly half of the genome is made up of unique sequences interspersed with repeated sequence elements with a period of approximately 600 nucleotides. This class represents roughly 95% of the total number of interspersed unique elements in the genome. The remaining 5% are uninterrupted by repeated sequences for at least 4000 nucleotide pairs. The interspersed repeated elements are narrowly distributed in length with 80% under 300 nucleotide pairs in length. About half of the repeated DNA (20-30% of the genome) is not interspersed among unique sequences. The close spacing of the short repeats interspersed throughout much of the genome is consistent with the occurrence of the huge network structures observed in the electron microscope for low Cot reassociation of moderately long fragments. An unusual class of heteroduplexes was detected in the electron microscope which is believed to derive from the reassociation of repeated sequences from different families which are frequently found adjacent to one another in different locations in the genome. The occurrence of this novel arrangement of repeated sequences may reflect the unusual organization of the dinoflagellate nucleus. However, in most respects the sequence arrangement in this unicellular alga is very typical of higher plants and animals.  相似文献   

10.
Clustering and subfamily relationships of the Alu family in the human genome   总被引:25,自引:1,他引:24  
Thirteen and 10 sequences of the Alu family of repeated DNA elements found within the human thymidine kinase and beta-tubulin genes, respectively, were compared. These genes have approximately five times the expected density of Alu family members. The consensus sequence that could be drawn from these 23 Alu family members would differ slightly from others drawn from random Alu family sequences but only at very heterogeneous positions. The different Alu family members do show different pairwise percentage identities, with approximately 15% (7 of 48 Alu family members analyzed) of them clearly representing a separate subfamily of sequences. This analysis also confirms the species- specific differences between human and the prosimian Galago crassicaudatus Alu family members. These data are consistent with both the origin of these sequences in primates less than 65-70 Myr ago and amplification since that time to their present 500,000 copies. The data do not show any special relationships among densely clustered Alu family members.   相似文献   

11.
We have examined the organization of the repeated and single copy DNA sequences in the genomes of two insects, the honeybee (Apis mellifera) and the housefly (Musca domestica). Analysis of the reassociation kinetics of honeybee DNA fragments 330 and 2,200 nucleotides long shows that approximately 90% of both size fragments is composed entirely of non-repeated sequences. Thus honeybee DNA contains few or no repeated sequences interspersed with nonrepeated sequences at a distance of less than a few thousand nucleotides. On the other hand, the reassociation kinetics of housefly DNA fragments 250 and 2,000 nucleotides long indicates that less than 15% of the longer fragments are composed entirely of single copy sequences. A large fraction of the housefly DNA therefore contains repeated sequences spaced less than a few thousand nucleotides apart. Reassociated repetitive DNA from the housefly was treated with S1 nuclease and sized on agarose A-50. The S1 resistant sequences have a bimodal distribution of lengths. Thirty-three percent is greater than 1,500 nucleotide pairs, and 67% has an average size about 300 nucleotide pairs. The genome of the housefly appears to have at least 70% of its DNA arranged as short repeats interspersed with single copy sequences in a pattern qualitatively similar to that of most eukaryotic genomes.  相似文献   

12.
A complementary DNA clone of 7 SK RNA from HeLa cells was used to study the genomic organization of 7 SK sequences in the human genome. Genomic hybridizations and genomic clones show that 7 SK is homologous to a family of disperse repeated sequences most of which lack the 3' end of the 7 SK RNA sequence. Only few of the genomic K sequences are homologous to both 3' and 5' 7 SK probes and presumably include the gene(s) for 7 SK RNA. The sequence of four genomic 7 SK clones confirms that they are in most cases pseudogenes. Although Alu sequences are frequently found near the 3' and 5' end of K DNA, the sequences immediately flanking the pseudogenes are different in all clones studied. However, direct repeats were found flanking directly the K DNA or the K-Alu unit, suggesting that the K sequences alone or in conjunction with Alu DNA might constitute a mobile element.  相似文献   

13.
HSAG-1 is a cloned member of a heterogeneous middle repetitive family of genetic elements which is capable of eliciting a leukemia-related surface antigen detected with a monoclonal antibody after DNA transformation of mouse cells. HSAG-1 was originally isolated from a Chinese hamster-human leukemia hybrid cell gene library both by sib-selection for antigen producing activity and by hybridization with labelled human genomic human DNA. We show here that the human labelled site is at the right hand end of the insert, while the antigen-eliciting portion is included in a 1450 bp fragment at the left hand end of the insert. We also present the complete nucleotide sequence of the 3369 bp insert. The sequence contains 12 elements which bear a significant resemblance to accepted consensus sequences for Alu repetitive elements. The right hand end contains adjacent elements with close sequence similarity to portions of the human and hamster type I and type II Alu consensus sequences. All of the other Alu-related elements have diverged relative to the Alu consensus sequences by additions, long deletions and substitutions. The left hand portion of the insert which has the antigen-producing activity contains four of these diverged elements representing a relatively high proportion (26%) of the nucleotide sequence. The sequence is thus consistent with our previous observations of a repetitive family with biological function.  相似文献   

14.
Evolution of alu family repeats since the divergence of human and chimpanzee   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
Summary The DNA sequences of three members of the Alu family of repeated sequences located 5 to the chimpanzee 2 gene have been determined. The base sequences of the three corresponding human Alu family repeats have been previously determined, permitting the comparison of identical Alu family members in human and chimpanzee. Here we compare the sequences of seven pairs of chimpanzee and human Alu repeats. In each case, with the exception of minor sequence differences, the identical Alu repeat is located at identical sites in the human and chimpanzee genomes. The Alu repeats diverge at the rate expected for nonselected sequences. Sequence conversion has not replaced any of these 14 Alu family members since the divergence between chimpanzee and human.  相似文献   

15.
SINEs and LINEs cluster in distinct DNA fragments of Giemsa band size   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
By in situ hybridization, short interspersed repeated DNA elements (SINEs), exemplified by Alu repeats, are located principally in Giemsa-light human metaphase chromosome bands. In contrast, the L1 family of long interspersed repeats (LINEs) preferentially cluster in Giemsa-dark bands. These SINE/LINE patterns also generally correspond to early and later replication band patterns. In order to provide a molecular link between structurally visible chromosome bands and a framework of interspersed repeats, we investigated patterns of SINE and LINE hybridization using pulse-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). Interspersed SINEs and LINEs hybridize with high intensity to specific size fragments of 0.2–3 megabase pairs (Mb). Using appropriate restriction enzymes and pulse-field conditions, a number of fragments were delineated that were either SINE or LINE rich, and were mutually exclusive. Control studies with a human endogenous retroviral repeat that is related in sequence to the major LINE family, delineated a subset of fragments of 0.07–0.4 Mb with unequal intensity. Thus these less numerous repeats also appear to cluster selectively in DNA domains that are larger than a chromosome loop (60–120 kb). In summary, PFGE studies independently confirm the clustering of interspersed repeats on contiguous DNA loops. Selective clustering of repeat motifs may contribute to special structural or functional properties of large chromosome domains, such as chromatin extension/condensation or replication characteristics. In some cases the DNA fragments defined by these repeats approach the size of tandem satellite arrays.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Repetitive DNA sequences in the human corticotropin-beta-lipotropin precursor gene region have been studied by blot hybridization analysis and DNA sequencing. Six repetitive sequences are present in this gene region; five of them are Alu family members with an approximate length of 300 base pairs, and the other consists of a portion of an Alu family sequence. Two of these Alu family members are located in the 5'-flanking region of the gene, and the remaining four within the intervening sequences. These Alu family sequences constitute inverted repeats in the intervening sequences as well as in the 5'-flanking region of the gene.  相似文献   

18.
Summary A short, highly repeated, interspersed DNA sequence from rice was characterized using a combination of techniques and genetically mapped to rice chromosomes by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis. A consensus sequence (GGC)n, where n varies from 13–16, for the repeated sequence family was deduced from sequence analysis. Southern blot analysis, restriction mapping of repeat element-containing genomic clones, and DNA sequence analysis indicated that the repeated sequence is interspersed in the rice genome, and is heterogeneous and divergent. About 200000 copies are present in the rice genome. Single copy sequences flanking the repeat element were used as RFLP markers to map individual repeat elements. Eleven such repeat elements were mapped to seven different chromosomes. The strategy for characterization of highly dispersed repeated DNA and its uses in genetic mapping, DNA fingerprinting, and evolutionary studies are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The aim of this study was to identify in human cells common targets of histone H3 lysine 9 (H3-Lys9) methylation, a modification that is generally associated with gene silencing. After chromatin immunoprecipitation using an H3-Lys9 methylated antibody, we cloned the recovered DNA and sequenced 47 independent clones. Of these, 38 clones (81%) contained repetitive elements, either short interspersed transposable element (SINE or Alu elements), long terminal repeat (LTR), long interspersed transposable element (LINE), or satellite region (ALR/Alpha) DNA, and three additional clones were near Alu elements. Further characterization of these repetitive elements revealed that 32 clones (68%) were Alu repeats, corresponding to both old Alu (23 clones) and young Alu (9 clones) subfamilies. Association of H3-Lys9 methylation was confirmed by chromatin immunoprecipitation-PCR using conserved Alu primers. In addition, we randomly selected 5 Alu repeats from the recovered clones and confirmed association with H3-Lys9 by PCR using primer sets flanking the Alu elements. Treatment with the DNA methyltransferase inhibitor 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine rapidly decreased the level of H3-Lys9 methylation in the Alu elements, suggesting that H3-Lys9 methylation may be related to the suppression of Alu elements through DNA methylation. Thus H3-Lys9 methylation is enriched at human repetitive elements, particularly Alu elements, and may play a role in the suppression of recombination by these elements.  相似文献   

20.
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