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1.
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In Drosophila a remarkable feature of oogenesis is the regression of the nurse cells after dumping their cytoplasmic contents into the oocyte. We have studied the nature of this process at the late stages of egg chamber development. In egg chambers DAPI staining shows highly condensed chromatin from stage 12 and TUNEL labelling shows DNA fragmentation up to stage 14. Gel electrophoresis of the end-labelled DNA, extracted from isolated egg chambers at the same stages of development, shows a ladder typical of apoptotic nuclei. This provides evidence that, during Drosophila oogenesis, the nurse cells undergo apoptosis. Apoptotic nuclei have also been detected in dumping-defective egg chambers, indicating that the cytoplasmic depletion of nurse cells is concurrent with but apparently not the cause of the process. Received: 12 December 1997 / Accepted: 6 January 1998 相似文献
3.
We describe an evolutionary comparison of expression of the actin gene families of two congeneric sea urchins. Heliocidaris tuberculata develops indirectly via a planktonic feeding pluteus that forms a juvenile rudiment after a long period of larval development.
H. erythrogramma is a direct developer that initiates formation of a juvenile rudiment immediately following gastrulation. The developmental
expression of each actin isoform of both species was determined by in situ hybridization. The observed expression patterns
are compared with known expression patterns in a related indirect-developing sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. Comparisons reveal unexpected patterns of conserved and divergent expression. Cytoplasmic actin, CyIII, is expressed in
the aboral ectoderm cells of the indirect developers, but is an unexpressed pseudogene in H. erythrogramma, which lacks aboral ectoderm. This change is correlated with developmental mode. Two CyII actins are expressed in S. purpuratus, and one in H. erythrogramma, but no CyII is expressed in H. tuberculata despite its great developmental similarity to S. purpuratus. CyI expression differs slightly between Heliocidaris and Strongylocentrotus with more ectodermal expression in Heliocidaris. Evolutionary changes in actin gene expression reflect both evolution of developmental mode as well as a surprising flexibility
in gene expression within a developmental mode.
Received: 27 July 1997 / Accepted: 30 December 1997 相似文献
4.
Keller Larkin M Deng WM Holder K Tworoger M Clegg N Ruohola-Baker H 《Development genes and evolution》1999,209(5):301-311
During Drosophila oogenesis the body axes are determined by signaling between the oocyte and the somatic follicle cells that surround the egg
chamber. A key event in the establishment of oocyte anterior-posterior polarity is the differential patterning of the follicle
cell epithelium along the anterior-posterior axis. Both the Notch and epithelial growth factor (EGF) receptor pathways are
required for this patterning. To understand how these pathways act in the process we have analyzed markers for anterior and
posterior follicle cells accompanying constitutive activation of the EGF receptor, loss of Notch function, and ectopic expression
of Delta. We find that a constitutively active EGF receptor can induce posterior fate in anterior but not in lateral follicle
cells, showing that the EGF receptor pathway can act only on predetermined terminal cells. Furthermore, Notch function is
required at both termini for appropriate expression of anterior and posterior markers, while loss of both the EGF receptor
and Notch pathways mimic the Notch loss-of-function phenotype. Ectopic expression of the Notch ligand, Delta, disturbs EGF
receptor dependent posterior follicle cell differentiation and anterior-posterior polarity of the oocyte. Our data are consistent
with a model in which the Notch pathway is required for early follicle cell differentiation at both termini, but is then repressed
at the posterior for proper determination of the posterior follicle cells by the EGF receptor pathway.
Received: 5 November 1998 / Accepted: 14 December 1998 相似文献
5.
We have isolated the Drosophila gene skittles (sktl) which shows homology to members of a novel family of phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate 5-kinases, including the gene product encoded by the human STM-7.I gene which has been assigned to the neurodegenerative disorder Friedreichs ataxia. In situ hybridization reveals sktl expression during oogenesis and spermatogenesis. Received: 7 February1997 / Accepted: 4 April 1997 相似文献
6.
Studies of somitogenesis in vertebrates have identified a number of genes that are regulated by a periodic oscillator that
patterns the pre-somitic mesoderm. One of these genes, hairy, is homologous to a Drosophila segmentation gene that also shows periodic spatial expression. This, and the periodic expression of a zebrafish homologue
of hairy during somitogenesis, has suggested that insect segmentation and vertebrate somitogenesis may use similar molecular mechanisms
and possibly share a common origin. In chicks and mice expression of the lunatic fringe gene also oscillates in the presomitic mesoderm. Fringe encodes an extracellular protein that regulates Notch signalling. This, and the finding that mutations in Notch or its ligands
disrupt somite patterning, suggests that Notch signalling plays an important role in vertebrate somitogenesis. Although Notch
signalling is not known to play a role in the formation of segments in Drosophila, we reasoned that it might do so in other insects such as the grasshopper, where segment boundaries form between cells, not
between syncytial nuclei as they do in Drosophila. Here we report the cloning of a single fringe gene from the grasshopper Schistocerca. We show that it is not detectably expressed in the forming trunk segments of the embryo until after segment boundaries have
formed. We conclude that fringe is not part of the mechanism that makes segments in Schistocerca. Thereafter it is expressed in a pattern which shows that it is a downstream target of the segmentation machinery and suggests
that it may play a role in segment morphogenesis. Like its Drosophila counterpart, Schistocerca fringe is also expressed in the eye, in rings in the legs, and during oogenesis, in follicle cells.
Received: 14 October 1999 / Accepted: 18 January 2000 相似文献
7.
8.
H. van Oss Y. Aron G. Ladizinsky 《TAG. Theoretical and applied genetics. Theoretische und angewandte Genetik》1997,94(3-4):452-457
Chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) restriction site diversity was assessed by 21 enzyme/probe combinations in 30 accessions of six Lens species, including the recently recognized L. lamottei and L. tomentosus. A total of 118 fragments were scored and 26 restriction site mutations were identified. The cpDNA restriction pattern supports
circumscribing L. lamottei and L. tomentosus as independent species. The value of the data for reconstructing phylogeny in the genus is discussed. The cpDNA of all 13
accessions of the lentil’s wild progenitor, L. culinaris subsp. orientalis, differed from that of the single lentil cultivars used in this study. This diversity indicates that other populations of
this subspecies from Turkey and Syria examined by Mayer and Soltis (1994) are potentially the founder members of lentil. Examination
of L. lamottei×L. nigricans hybrids between accessions having different restriction patterns showed paternal plastid inheritance in L. nigricans.
Received: 2 July 1996 / Accepted: 19 July 1996 相似文献
9.
The presence of two sets of paired appendages is one of the defining features of jawed vertebrates. We are interested in identifying
genetic systems that could have been responsible for the origin of the first set of such appendages, for their subsequent
duplication at a different axial level, and/or for the generation of their distinct identities. It has been hypothesized that
four genes of the T-box gene family (Tbx2–Tbx5) played important roles in the course of vertebrate limb evolution. To test this idea, we characterized the orthologs of
tetrapod limb-expressed T-box genes from a teleost, Danio rerio. Here we report isolation of three of these genes, tbx2, tbx4, and tbx5. We found that their expression patterns are remarkably similar to those of their tetrapod counterparts. In particular, expression
of tbx5 and tbx4 is restricted to pectoral and pelvic fin buds, respectively, while tbx2 can be detected at the anterior and posterior margins of the outgrowing fin buds. This, in combination with conserved expression
patterns in other tissues, suggests that the last common ancestor of teleosts and tetrapods possessed all four of these limb-expressed
T-box genes (Tbx2–Tbx5), and that these genes had already acquired, and have subsequently maintained, their gene-specific functions. Furthermore,
this evidence provides molecular support for the notion that teleost pectoral and pelvic fins and tetrapod fore- and hindlimbs,
respectively, are homologous structures, as suggested by comparative morphological analyses.
Received: 14 July 1999 / Accepted: 4 September 1999 相似文献
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11.
We have cloned, from an oribatid mite, a gene homologous to the zerknült (zen) genes of insects and the Hox 3 genes of vertebrates. Hox genes specify cell fates in specific regions of the body in all
metazoans studied and are expressed in antero-posteriorly restricted regions of the embryo. This is true of the vertebrate
Hox 3 but not of the zen genes, the insect homologs, and it has been proposed that the zen genes have lost their Hox-like function in the ancestor of the insects. We studied expression of a mite Hox 3/zen homolog and found that it is expressed in a discrete antero-posterior region of the body with an anterior boundary coinciding
with that of the chelicerate homolog of the Drosophila Hox gene, proboscipedia, and propose that its loss of Hox function in insects is due to functional redundancy due to this overlap with another Hox
gene.
Received: 23 April 1998 / Accepted: 25 August 1998 相似文献
12.
R. E. Steele Pauline Lieu Ninh H. Mai M. Andrew Shenk Michael P. Sarras Jr. 《Development genes and evolution》1996,206(4):247-259
A gene encoding a receptor protein-tyrosine kinase closely related to the vertebrate insulin receptor has been identified
in the Cnidarian Hydra vulgaris. The gene is expressed in both epithelial layers of the adult polyp. A particularly high level of expression is seen in the
ectoderm of the proximal portions of the tentacles and in a ring of ectodermal cells at the border between the foot basal
disk and body column. The expression pattern of the gene in asexual buds is dynamic; expression is high throughout the newly
emerging bud but the area of high expression becomes restricted to the apex as the bud lengthens. When the bud begins hypostome
and tentacle formation, a high level of expression appears at the bases of the emerging tentacles. Finally, a ring of high
expression appears just above the foot of the bud, completing the pattern seen in the adult polyp. The presence of this receptor
and its pattern of expression suggested that an endogenous molecule related to insulin plays a role in regulating cell division
in the body column and in differentiation of the tentacle and foot cells in Hydra, with the switch between the two being determined by the level of the receptor. Treatment of Hydra polyps with mammalian insulin caused an increase in the number of ectodermal and endodermal cells undergoing DNA synthesis.
Received: 19 April 1996 / Accepted: 5 July 1996 相似文献
13.
Jonathan E. Boyson Kristen K. Iwanaga Julie A. Urvater Austin L. Hughes Thaddeus G. Golos D. I. Watkins 《Immunogenetics》1999,49(2):86-98
HLA-G is a nonclassical major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecule that is expressed only in the human placenta,
suggesting that it plays an important role at the fetal-maternal interface. In rhesus monkeys, which have similar placentation
to humans, the HLA-G orthologue is a pseudogene. However, rhesus monkeys express a novel placental MHC class I molecule, Mamu-AG, which has HLA-G-like
characteristics. Phylogenetic analysis of AG alleles in two Old World primate species, the baboon and the rhesus macaque, revealed limited diversity characteristic of
a nonclassical MHC class I locus. Gene trees constructed using classical and nonclassical primate MHC class I alleles demonstrated
that the AG locus was most closely related to the classical A locus. Interestingly, gene tree analyses suggested that the AG alleles were most closely related to a subset of A alleles which are the products of an ancestral interlocus recombination event between the A and B loci. Calculation of the rates of synonymous and nonsynonymous substitution at the AG locus revealed that positive selection was not acting on the codons encoding the peptide binding region. In exon 4, however,
the rate of nonsynonymous substitution was significantly lower than the rate of synonymous substitution, suggesting that negative
selection was acting on these codons.
Received: 22 April 1998 / Revised: 15 July 1998 相似文献
14.
The genes belonging to the Paired class exert primary developmental functions. They are characterized by six invariant amino
acid residues in the homeodomain, while the residue at position 50 can be a serine, glutamine or lysine as in the Pax-type,
Q50 Paired-like or the K50 Paired-like homeodomains respectively. Genes in this class emerged early in animal evolution: three distinct Pax genes and
two Q50 Paired-like genes have recently been characterised from cnidarians. Phylogenetic molecular reconstructions taking into account
homeodomain and paired-domain sequences provide some new perspectives on the evolution of the Paired-class genes. Analysis
of 146 Paired-class homeodomains from a wide range of metazoan taxa allowed us to identify 18 families among the three sub-classes
from which the aristaless family displays the least diverged position. Both Pax-type and K50 families branch within the Q50 Paired-like sequences implying that these are the most ancestral. Consequently, most Pax genes arose from a Paired-like ancestor,
via fusion of a Paired-like homebox gene with a gene encoding only a paired domain; the Cnidaria appear to contain genes representing
the ’before’ and ’after’ fusion events.
Received: 16 September 1998 / Accepted: 27 October 1998 相似文献
15.
J. -Y. Fann A. Kovarik V. Hemleben N. I. Tsirekidze T. G. Beridze 《TAG. Theoretical and applied genetics. Theoretische und angewandte Genetik》2001,103(6-7):1068-1073
Highly repeated satellite DNA (stDNA) of citric plants was characterized by cloning and sequencing 10–14 repeats of each plant (Citrus limon, C. sinensis, C. ichangensis, Poncirus trifoliata). The monomers are mostly 181 bp in length with a GC-content between 60% and 68% (significantly higher than the average GC-content of the citrus group genomes). Similarity among the repeats indicates that they belong to a satellite family that underwent species-specific modifications, which are reflected in the phylogenetic relationships. Curvature provoked by dA-stretches of the repeats analyzed by gel shifts revealed structural conservation, even though the nucleotide sequences vary among species, thereby probably supporting the heterochromatic structure of stDNA. We show that the species-specific modification of the satellite consensus involves changes in the position and number of dA tracts. The molecule shapes of satellite oligomeres predicted by computer modelling indicate a superhelical structure of the tandem repeats which is in a good agreement with the satellite sequence dendrogram. The contribution of DNA bending elements to the evolution of plant satellite repeats is discussed. Received: 27 November 2000 / Accepted: 12 January 2001 相似文献
16.
The genomic organization and evolution of the natural killer immunoglobulin-like receptor (KIR) gene cluster 总被引:11,自引:7,他引:11
Natural killer (NK) immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs) are a family of polymorphic receptors which interact with specific
motifs on HLA class I molecules and modulate NK cytolytic activity. In this study, we analyzed a recently sequenced subgenomic
region on chromosome 19q13.4 containing eight members of the KIR receptor repertoire. Six members are clustered within a 100-kb continuous sequence. These genes include a previously unpublished
member of the KIR gene family 2DS6, as well as 2DL1, 2DL4, 3DL1, 2DS4, 3DL2, from centromere to telomere. Two additional KIR genes, KIRCI and 2DL3, which may be located centromeric of this cluster were also analyzed. We show that the KIR genes have undergone repeated gene duplications. Diversification between the genes has occurred postduplication primarily
as a result of retroelement indels and gene truncation. Using pre- and postduplication Alu sequences identified within these
genes as evolutionary molecular clocks, the evolution and duplication of this gene cluster is estimated to have occurred 30–45 million
years ago, during primate evolution. A proposed model of the duplication history of the KIR gene family leading to their present organization is presented.
Received: 25 November 1999 / Revised: 10 January 2000 相似文献
17.
Delattre M Briand S Paces-Fessy M Blanchet-Tournier MF 《Development genes and evolution》1999,209(5):294-300
The Suppressor of fused [Su(fu)] gene of Drosophila melanogaster encodes a protein containing a PEST sequence [sequence enriched in proline (P), glutamic acid (E), serine (S) and threonine
(T)] which acts as an antagonist to the serine-threonine kinase Fused in Hedgehog (Hh) signal transduction during embryogenesis.
The Su(fu) gene isolated from a distantly related Drosophila species, D. virilis, shows significantly high homology throughout its protein sequence with its D. melanogaster counterpart. We show that these two Drosophila homologs of Su(fu) are functionally interchangeable in enhancing the fused phenotype. We have also isolated mammalian homologs of Su(fu). The absence of the PEST sequence in the mammalian Su(fu) protein suggests a different regulation for this product between
fly and vertebrates. Using the yeast two-hybrid method, we show that the murine Su(fu) protein can interact directly with
the Fused and Cubitus interruptus proteins, known partners of Su(fu) in Drosophila. These data are discussed in the light of their evolutionary relationships.
Received: 11 September 1998 / Accepted: 9 December 1998 相似文献
18.
Hairless is a member of the Notch signalling pathway, where it acts as antagonist by binding to Suppressor of Hairless [Su(H)], thereby
inhibiting Notch target gene activation. The pathway and its members are highly conserved in metazoans from worms to humans.
However, a Hairless orthologue from another species has not yet been identified. The identification of Hairless in largely diverged species by cross-hybridization has failed so far probably due to a low degree of conservation. Therefore,
we turned to D. hydei where a Hairless mutation has been described before. The D. hydei Hairless orthologue is reasonably well conserved with regard to gene structure and expression. The prospective Hairless protein orthologues
share several highly conserved regions which are separated by quite diverged stretches. As to be expected, the largest region
of high conservation corresponds to the Su(H) binding domain. This region is also functionally conserved, since this D. hydei protein domain binds very strongly to the D. melanogaster Su(H) protein. The other conserved regions support our earlier structure-function analysis since they nicely correspond to
previously defined, functionally important protein domains. Most notably, the very C-terminal domain which is very sensitive
to structural alterations, is nearly identical between the two species. In summary, this evolutionary study improves the knowledge
on functionally significant domains of the Hairless protein, and may be helpful for the future identification of homologues
in other animals, especially in vertebrates.
Received: 26 August 1998 / Accepted: 9 November 1998 相似文献
19.
Amadou C 《Immunogenetics》1999,49(4):362-367
A comparison of the major histocompatibility complex (Mhc) region between human and mouse highlights both stability and differences. The class II and class III regions are orthologous;
they probably existed in the ancestor in a similar organization and were not subjected to major rearrangement. The class I
genes, by contrast, are definitely paralogous, having been reorganized several times. As long as only class I genes were identified,
the class I regions of human and mouse were difficult to compare directly. The identification of non-class I genes has allowed
a comparative map to be drawn, which shows that the class I region is orthologous between human and mouse as well. The lack
of orthology specifically applies to the class I sequences. However, the comparative map shows that the non-orthologous class
I sequences occupy homologous locations with regard to the conserved genes. I propose a model to explain this paradox. The
conserved genes may represent samples of a dense "framework" of genes whose alterations are deleterious. The homologous positions
occupied by class I genes would thus represent the few permissive places allowing major perturbations. The evolution of the
class I sequences, by duplication and deletion, independently in the two species, has taken place within the scope defined
by the framework: insertion at the permissive places, and expansion by creation of class I-related DNA by duplication, thus
pushing back the boundaries of the framework.
Received: 23 March 1998 / Revised: August 14 1998 相似文献
20.
Diversity and evolution of T-cell receptor variable region genes in mammals and birds 总被引:4,自引:6,他引:4
The receptor of a T lymphocyte (TCR) recognizes nonself antigens in the company of major histocompatibility complex (MHC)
molecules presented to it by the antigen-presenting cell. The variable region of TCR is encoded by either a concatenation
of variable region (TCR-V), diversity region (TCR-D), and joining region (TCR-J) genes, or a concatenation of TCR-V and TCR-J genes. The TCR-V genes exist as a multigene family in vertebrate species. Here we study the evolutionary relationships of TCR-V genes from humans, sheep, cattle, rabbits, mice, and chicken. These six species can be classified into two groups according
to the frequency of γδ T-cells in their peripheral T-cell populations. The "γδ low" group of species includes humans and mice,
in which γδ T-cells constitute very limited portion of the T-cell population. The "γδ high" group includes sheep, cattle,
rabbits, and chicken, in which γδ T-cells comprise up to 60% of the T-cell population. Here, we compiled TCR-V sequences from the six species and conducted a phylogenetic analysis. We identified various TCR-V gene subgroups based on the analysis. We found that humans and mice have representatives from nearly all of the subgroups
identified, while other species have lost subgroups to different extent. Therefore, the γδ low species have a high degree
of diversity of TCR-V genes, while γδ high species all have limited diversity of TCR-V genes. This pattern is similar to that found for immunoglobulin variable region (IGV) genes.
Received: 20 May 1999 / Revised: 13 July 1999 相似文献