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1.
Ciliates are microbial eukaryotes that separate their nuclear functions into a germline micronucleus and a somatic macronucleus. During development of the macronucleus the genome undergoes a series of reorganization events that includes the precise excision of intervening DNA. Here, we determine the architecture of four loci in the micronuclear and macronuclear genomes of the ciliate Chilodonella uncinata and compare the levels of variation in micronuclear-limited sequences to macronuclear destined sequences at two of these loci. We find that within a population, germline-limited sequences are evolving at the same rate as other putatively neutral sites, but between populations germline-limited sequences are accumulating mutations at a much faster rate than other sites. We also find evidence of macronuclear recombination and incomplete elimination of intervening DNA, which result in increased diversity in the macronuclear genome. Our results support the assertion that the unusual genomic features of ciliates can result in rapid and unpredicted patterns of diversification.  相似文献   

2.
The micronuclear versions of genes in stichotrichous ciliates are interrupted by multiple, short, non-coding DNA segments called internal eliminated segments, or IESs. IESs divide a gene into macronuclear destined segments, or MDSs. In some micronuclear genes MDSs are in a scrambled disorder. During development of a micronucleus into a macronucleus after cell mating the IESs are excised from micronuclear genes and the MDSs are spliced in the sequentially correct order. Pairs of short repeat sequences in the ends of MDSs undergo homologous recombination to excise IESs and splice MDSs. However, the repeat sequences are too short to guide unambiguously their own alignment in preparation for recombination. Based on experiments by others on the distantly related ciliate, Paramecium, we propose a molecular model of template-guided recombination to explain the excision of the 100,000-150,000 IESs and splicing of MDSs, including unscrambling, in the genome of stichotrichous ciliates. The model solves the problem of correct pairing of pointers, precisely identifies MDS-IES junctions, and provides for irreversible recombination.  相似文献   

3.
Germ line micronuclear genes in ciliated protozoa contain two types of interrupting sequences. Some genes contain introns, but internal eliminated segments (IESs) are much more prevalent. IESs are AT-rich DNA segments that separate macronucleus-destined segments (MDSs) in micronuclear genes. All IESs are excised and destroyed when a micronucleus develops into a macronucleus after each cell mating. IESs have no discernible function. Therefore, an investigation of the behavior of IESs in evolution has been undertaken to assess their possible significance. The IESs in the micronuclear gene encoding the beta-subunit of the telomere-binding protein (beta-TP) are not conserved in number, position, sequence, or length during the evolution of four oxytrichid ciliates. In contrast, the scrambled pattern of MDSs and IESs of the micronuclear actin I gene has been conserved during evolution; however, the precise positions, sequences, and lengths of the IESs differ among species, and in some organisms the actin I gene contains an additional IES and MDS. Corresponding IESs in the actin I genes among the different organisms have shifted positions by 1 to 14 bp, presumably by a mutation-shifting mechanism, creating differences in the repeat sequences flanking IESs. Thus, conservation of a particular repeat sequence among species is not required for IES excision. The changes in IES number and position in the beta-TP genes among ciliates are in sharp contrast to the stability of the intron position. Therefore, IESs are volatile, hypermutable elements that are inserted, removed, shifted, and modified continuously in the germ line through evolutionary time.  相似文献   

4.
Recognition of the role of non-Mendelian inheritance is on the rise, particularly as epigenetic phenomena are shown to shape the transformation of genomes into phenotypes. Ciliates provide a model system in which to explore the role of epigenetics because ciliates have both a germ line (micronuclear) and somatic (macronuclear) genome within every cell. In the ciliate Chilodonella uncinata, the macronucleus is extensively fragmented such that many genes end up on their own chromosomes. Hence, it is possible to track the fate of unlinked genes within macronuclei of C. uncinata. Here we demonstrate that the pattern of inheritance in isolates of C. uncinata is complex and involves both Mendelian transmission between micronuclei and macronuclei and epigenetic phenomena. The macronuclei from 2 isolates of C. uncinata and their progeny share identical rDNA loci and 2 identical beta-tubulin paralogs, yet have different actin paralogs and some beta-tubulin paralogs that are not shared. We propose a model in which all the divergent paralogs are present in the ciliate micronuclei. Under this model, different paralogs are retained in developing macronuclei following conjugation. We further speculate that an epigenetic mechanism, such as RNA interference, is involved in selective retention of specific paralogs within lines. This system allows the exploration of epigenetic phenomena that shape somatic genomes and provides parallels to studies of the development of somatic nuclei within animals.  相似文献   

5.
M Tan  K Heckmann  C Brünen-Nieweler 《Gene》1999,233(1-2):131-140
The micronuclear gene of the ciliated protozoan Euplotes octocarinatus (Eo) syngen 1 encoding the putative aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase cofactor (ARCE), as well as its macronuclear version and the corresponding cDNA, were amplified and sequenced. Analyses of the sequences revealed that the micronuclear gene contains two sequences (430 and 625bp long) that are missing in the macronuclear version of this gene. These sequences are called 'internal eliminated sequences' (IESs) and appear to occur in all ciliates. The two IESs are located in the coding region of the micronuclear gene. One IES is flanked by a pair of dinucleotide 5'-TA-3' direct repeats and the other one by a pair of hepta-nucleotide 5'-TTACTGA-3' direct repeats. Inside the two IESs, several other sequence repeats were found. The macronuclear DNA molecule carrying this gene is 1517bp long and shows characteristics typical of macronuclear chromosomes of hypotrichous ciliates. Copy number determination revealed that the molecule is amplified to only about 750 copies per macronucleus. The deduced protein is a 441-amino-acid (aa) polypeptide with a molecular mass of 50kDa. It shares a conserved endothelial monocyte-activating polypeptide II (EMAP II)-like carboxyl-terminal domain and a hydrophilic central domain containing a KEKE-motif with a group of proteins associated with aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases and tRNAs.  相似文献   

6.
BACKGROUND: The germline genome of ciliates is extensively rearranged during development of a new somatic macronucleus from the germline micronucleus, a process that follows sexual events. In Paramecium tetraurelia, single-copy internal eliminated sequences (IESs) and multicopy transposons are eliminated, whereas cellular genes are amplified to approximately 800 n. For a subset of IESs, introduction of the IES sequence into the maternal (prezygotic) macronucleus specifically inhibits excision of the homologous IES in the developing zygotic macronucleus. This and other homology-dependent maternal effects have suggested that rearrangement patterns are epigenetically determined by an RNA-mediated, trans-nuclear comparison, involving the RNA interference pathway, of germline and somatic genomes. RESULTS: We report the identification of novel developmentally regulated RNA binding proteins, Nowa1p and Nowa2p, which are required for the survival of sexual progeny. Green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusions show that Nowa1p accumulates into the maternal macronucleus shortly before meiosis of germline micronuclei and is later transported to developing macronuclei. Nowa1p/2p depletion impairs the elimination of transposons and of those IESs that are controlled by maternal effects, confirming the existence of distinct IES classes. CONCLUSIONS: The results indicate that Nowa proteins are essential components of the trans-nuclear-crosstalk mechanism that is responsible for epigenetic programming of genome rearrangements. We discuss implications for the current models of genome scanning in ciliates, a process related to the formation of heterochromatin by RNA interference in other eukaryotes.  相似文献   

7.
Conversion of the germ line micronuclear genome into the genome of a somatic macronucleus in Tetrahymena thermophila requires several DNA rearrangement processes. These include (i) excision and subsequent elimination of several thousand internal eliminated sequences (IESs) scattered throughout the micronuclear genome and (ii) breakage of the micronuclear chromosomes into hundreds of DNA fragments, followed by de novo telomere addition to their ends. Chromosome breakage sequences (Cbs) that determine the sites of breakage and short regions of DNA adjacent to them are also eliminated. Both processes occur concomitantly in the developing macronucleus. Two stage-specific protein factors involved in germ line DNA elimination have been described previously. Pdd1p and Pdd2p (for programmed DNA degradation) physically associate with internal eliminated sequences in transient electron-dense structures in the developing macronucleus. Here, we report the purification, sequence analysis, and characterization of Pdd3p, a novel developmentally regulated, chromodomain-containing polypeptide. Pdd3p colocalizes with Pdd1p in the peripheral regions of DNA elimination structures, but is also found more internally. DNA cross-linked and immunoprecipitated with Pdd1p- or Pdd3p-specific antibodies is enriched in IESs, but not Cbs, suggesting that different protein factors are involved in elimination of these two groups of sequences.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Thousands of single-copy internal eliminated sequences (IESs) are excised from the germ line genome of ciliates during development of the polygenomic somatic macronucleus, following sexual events. Paramecium IESs are short, noncoding elements that frequently interrupt coding sequences. No absolutely conserved sequence element, other than flanking 5′-TA-3′ direct repeats, has been identified among sequenced IESs; the mechanisms of their specific recognition and precise elimination are unknown. Previous work has revealed the existence of an epigenetic control of excision. It was shown that the presence of one IES in the vegetative macronucleus results in a specific inhibition of the excision of the same element during the development of a new macronucleus, in the following sexual generation. We have assessed the generality and sequence specificity of this transnuclear maternal control by studying the effects of macronuclear transformation with 13 different IESs. We show that at least five of them can be maintained in the new macronuclear genome; sequence specificity is complete both between genes and between different IESs in the same gene. In all cases, the degree of excision inhibition correlates with the copy number of the maternal IES, but each IES shows a characteristic inhibition efficiency. Short internal IES-like segments were found to be excised from two of the IESs when excision between normal boundaries was inhibited. Available data suggest that the sequence specificity of these maternal effects is mediated by pairing interactions between homologous nucleic acids.  相似文献   

10.
K M Mayer  K Mikami  J D Forney 《Genetics》1998,148(1):139-149
The excision of internal eliminated sequences (IESs) from the germline micronuclear DNA occurs during the differentiation of a new macronuclear genome in ciliated protozoa. In Paramecium, IESs are generally short (28-882 bp), AT rich DNA elements that show few conserved sequence features with the exception of an inverted-terminal-repeat consensus sequence that has similarity to the ends of mariner/Tcl transposons (KLOBUTCHER and HERRICK 1995). We have isolated and analyzed a mutant cell line that cannot excise a 370-bp IESs (IES2591) from the coding region of the 51A variable surface protein gene. A single micronuclear C to T transition within the consensus sequence prevents excision. The inability to excise IES259 I has revealed a 28-bp IES inside the larger IES, suggesting that reiterative integration of these elements can occur. Together, the consensus sequence mutation and the evidence for reiterative integration support the theory that Paramecium IESs evolved from transposable elements. Unlike a previously studied Paramecium IES, the presence of this IES in the macronucleus does not completely inhibit excision of its Mild-type micronuclear copy through multiple sexual generations.  相似文献   

11.
Genes in the germline (micronuclear) genome of hypotrichous ciliates are interrupted by multiple, short, non-coding, AT-rich sequences called internal eliminated segments, or IESs. During conversion of a micronucleus to a somatic nucleus (macronucleus) after cell mating, all IESs are excised from the germline genes and the gene segments, called macronuclear-destined segments, or MDSs, are spliced. Excision of the approximately 150 000 IESs from a haploid germline genome in Oxytricha nova requires approximately 150 000 recombinant events. In three of 10 genes the MDSs are scrambled. During macronuclear development the MDSs are unscrambled, possibly by folding of the DNA to allow MDSs to ligate in the correct order. The nine MDSs in the actin I gene of O.nova are scrambled in the random order, 3-4-6-5-7-9-2-1-8, and MDS 2 is inverted. The 14 MDSs in the alphaTP gene of O.nova and Stylonychia mytilus are scrambled in the non-random order, 1-3-5-7-9-11-2-4-6-8-10-12-13-14. The 45 MDSs in the DNA pol alpha gene are non-randomly scrambled into an odd/even series, with an inversion of one-third of the gene. Additional IESs have been inserted into these three genes during evolution of Oxytricha trifallax, slightly modifying scrambling patterns. The non-random scrambled patterns in the alphaTP and DNA pol alpha genes are explained by multiple, simultaneous IES insertions. The randomly scrambled pattern in the actin I gene may arise from an initially non-randomly scrambled pattern by recombination among multiple IESs. Alternatively, IESs inserted sporadically (individually) in a non-scrambled configuration might subsequently recombine, converting a non-scrambled gene into a randomly scrambled one. IESs shift along a DNA molecule, most likely as a result of mutations at MDS/IES junctions. Shifting of IESs has the effect of 'transferring' nucleotides from one MDS to another, but does not change the overall sequence of nucleotides in the combined MDSs. In addition to shifting in position, IESs accumulate mutations at a high rate and increase and decrease in length within a species and during speciation. The phenomena of IESs and of MDS scrambling represent remarkable flexibility of the hypotrich genome, possibly reflecting a process of MDS shuffling that facilitates the evolution of genes.  相似文献   

12.
研究旨在对尖毛虫属内现有物种的3种乱序小核基因结构进行比较,探讨其乱序模式。于湛江湖光红树林水域中采集到一个尖毛虫属物种Oxytricha sp.(ZJ),成功扩增了其肌动蛋白Ⅰ(ActinⅠ)、端粒结合蛋白(α-TBP)、DNA聚合酶α(DNA pol α)3个乱序基因的完整大核基因序列和完整/部分小核基因序列,并结合已有资料对比研究了尖毛虫属这3个乱序基因的进化。结果表明:(1)Oxytricha sp.(ZJ)与O.nova的小核Actin Ⅰ基因具有相同的乱序模式,区别于其余的尖毛虫属物种;在增加尖毛虫属物种的基础上,对前人推测提出了质疑,我们认为MDS-IES接合处移动现象在乱序MDSs之间并非比非乱序MDSs之间更保守。(2)Oxytricha sp.(ZJ)与O.nova的小核α-TBP基因具有相同乱序模式和相似长度的IESs。(3)Oxytricha sp.(ZJ)的小核DNA pol α基因乱序模式,区别于任一已报道物种,与属内O. trifallax最为相近。基于序列分析,在DNA pol α基因中发现了一例IES转换为MDS的痕迹,以及由此导致原先MDS的丢失。研究发现在编码区内IES向MDS的转变,使得本应删除的序列成为基因组永久保留的一部分。  相似文献   

13.
The DNA of ciliated protozoa.   总被引:35,自引:0,他引:35       下载免费PDF全文
Ciliates contain two types of nuclei: a micronucleus and a macronucleus. The micronucleus serves as the germ line nucleus but does not express its genes. The macronucleus provides the nuclear RNA for vegetative growth. Mating cells exchange haploid micronuclei, and a new macronucleus develops from a new diploid micronucleus. The old macronucleus is destroyed. This conversion consists of amplification, elimination, fragmentation, and splicing of DNA sequences on a massive scale. Fragmentation produces subchromosomal molecules in Tetrahymena and Paramecium cells and much smaller, gene-sized molecules in hypotrichous ciliates to which telomere sequences are added. These molecules are then amplified, some to higher copy numbers than others. rDNA is differentially amplified to thousands of copies per macronucleus. Eliminated sequences include transposonlike elements and sequences called internal eliminated sequences that interrupt gene coding regions in the micronuclear genome. Some, perhaps all, of these are excised as circular molecules and destroyed. In at least some hypotrichs, segments of some micronuclear genes are scrambled in a nonfunctional order and are recorded during macronuclear development. Vegetatively growing ciliates appear to possess a mechanism for adjusting copy numbers of individual genes, which corrects gene imbalances resulting from random distribution of DNA molecules during amitosis of the macronucleus. Other distinctive features of ciliate DNA include an altered use of the conventional stop codons.  相似文献   

14.
Ciliates contain two types of nuclei: a micronucleus and a macronucleus. The micronucleus serves as the germ line nucleus but does not express its genes. The macronucleus provides the nuclear RNA for vegetative growth. Mating cells exchange haploid micronuclei, and a new macronucleus develops from a new diploid micronucleus. The old macronucleus is destroyed. This conversion consists of amplification, elimination, fragmentation, and splicing of DNA sequences on a massive scale. Fragmentation produces subchromosomal molecules in Tetrahymena and Paramecium cells and much smaller, gene-sized molecules in hypotrichous ciliates to which telomere sequences are added. These molecules are then amplified, some to higher copy numbers than others. rDNA is differentially amplified to thousands of copies per macronucleus. Eliminated sequences include transposonlike elements and sequences called internal eliminated sequences that interrupt gene coding regions in the micronuclear genome. Some, perhaps all, of these are excised as circular molecules and destroyed. In at least some hypotrichs, segments of some micronuclear genes are scrambled in a nonfunctional order and are recorded during macronuclear development. Vegetatively growing ciliates appear to possess a mechanism for adjusting copy numbers of individual genes, which corrects gene imbalances resulting from random distribution of DNA molecules during amitosis of the macronucleus. Other distinctive features of ciliate DNA include an altered use of the conventional stop codons.  相似文献   

15.
Three hypotheses on the evolutionary/molecular origin of internal eliminated segments (IESs) in the germline of hypotrichous ciliates are discussed in the context of the high rate of mutation accumulation in IESs, shifting of IESs during speciation, and evolutionary scrambling of segments within some hypotrich germline genes. Developmental excision of IESs from the germline in Paramecium suggests that the parental macronucleus may provide nucleic acid sequence information to guide excision of IESs and splicing of macronuclear-destined sequences. In ciliates of the oxytrichid/stylonychid group, such a mechanism could explain the precision of excision of IESs and gene unscrambling. Recently initiated molecular/genetic studies may eventually clarify the role of the parental macronucleus in IES excision and gene unscrambling as well as the molecular mechanisms of these events.  相似文献   

16.
ABSTRACT “The capacity to blunder slightly is the real marvel of DNA. Without this special attribute, we would still be anaerobic bacteria and there would be no music.” Lewis Thomas3 Hypotrichs have evolved extraordinary ways of organizing, manipulating, and replicating the DNA in their micronuclear and macronuclear genomes. Short macronuclear DNA molecules containing single genes are created by excision from chromosomes, accompanied by massive elimination of the germline DNA sequences between genes. Germline genes themselves are interrupted by multiple noncoding segments called internal eliminated segments, or IESs, that divide genes into multiple macronuclear-destined segments, or MDSs. The functional significance of this organization is unknown. Over evolutionary time IESs accumulate mutations rapidly are inserted into or excised from genes, and shift position along DNA molecules. MDSs are ligated to create functional genes when IESs are spliced out of micronuclear DNA during macronuclear development. MDSs in some germline genes are in scrambled disorder and become unscrambled in association with IES elimination. Replication of DNA in the macronucleus is accomplished by organization of replication enzymes and factors into a structure that sweeps through the macronucleus to replicate the many millions of gene-sized DNA molecules. The significance of many of the bizarre DNA phenomena in the evolutionary/functional success of hypotrichs is still unclear.  相似文献   

17.
ABSTRACT Internal eliminated segments (IESs) are sequences that interrupt coding and noncoding regions of germline (micronuclear) genes of ciliated protozoa. IESs are flanked by short, unique repeat sequences, which are presumably required for precise IES excision during macronuclear development. Coding and noncoding segments of genes separated by IESs are called macronuclear-destined segments, or MDSs. We have compiled the characteristics of 89 individual IESs in 12 micronuclear genes in the Oxytricha and Stylonychia genera to define the IES phenomenon precisely, a first step in determining the origin, function and significance of IESs. Although all 89 IESs among the 12 different genes are AT-rich, they show no other similarity in sequence, length, position or number. Two main types of IESs are present. IESs that separate scrambled MDSs are significantly shorter and more frequent and have longer flanking repeat sequences than IESs that intervene between nonscrambled MDSs. A comparison of the nonscrambled gene encoding β-telomere binding protein in three species of hypotrichs shows that even in the same gene IESs are not conserved in sequence, length, position, or number from species to species. A comparison of IESs in the scrambled gene encoding actin I in the three species shows that the evolutionary behavior of IESs in a scrambled gene may be more constrained. However, IESs in the scrambled actin I gene have shifted along the DNA molecule during evolution. In total, the various studies show that IESs are hypermutable in sequence and length. They insert, excise, and shift along DNA molecules more or less randomly during evolution, with no discernible function or consequences.  相似文献   

18.
More than 100,000 interstitial segments of DNA (internal eliminated sequences [IESs]) are excised from the genome during the formation of a new macronucleus in Euplotes crassus. IESs include unique sequence DNA as well as two related families of transposable elements, Tec1 and Tec2. Here we describe a new class of E. crassus transposons, Tec3, which is present in 20 to 30 copies in the micronuclear genome. Tec3 elements have long inverted terminal repeats and contain a degenerate open reading frame encoding a tyrosine-type recombinase. One characterized copy of Tec3 (Tec3-1) is 4.48 kbp long, has 1.23-kbp inverted terminal repeats, and resides within the micronuclear copy of the ribosomal protein L29 gene (RPL29). The 23 bp at the extreme ends of this element are very similar to those in other E. crassus IESs and, like these other IESs, Tec3-1 is excised during the polytene chromosome stage of macronuclear development to generate a free circular form with an unusual junction structure. In contrast, a second cloned element, Tec3-2, is quite similar to Tec3-1 but lacks the terminal 258 bp of the inverted repeats, so that its ends do not resemble the other E. crassus IES termini. The Tec3-2 element appears to reside in a large segment of the micronuclear genome that is subject to developmental elimination. Models for the origins of these two types of Tec3 elements are presented, along with a discussion of how some members of this new transposon family may have come to be excised by the same machinery that removes other E. crassus IESs.  相似文献   

19.
Ciliated protozoa have separate germline and somatic nuclei, yet unlike larger organisms, both nuclei reside in the same cytoplasm. The micronuclei contain the germline and the macronucleus is the somatic nucleus. Thousands of DNA elements are normally removed from the micronuclear genome as it forms a new macronucleus during each sexual cycle. A recent study directly links the excision of these internal eliminated sequences (IESs) to mating type determination by showing that a pleiotropic mutation affecting mating type also prevents the excision of an IES from a surface protein gene(1). Remarkably, once the IES is present in the old macronucleus it prevents excision of that specific IES during formation of the next macronucleus.  相似文献   

20.
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