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1.
A new gene closely related to the glycophorin A (GPA) and glycophorin B (GPB) genes has been identified in the normal human genome as well as in that of persons with known alterations of GPA and/or GPB expression. This gene, called glycophorin E (GPE), is transcribed into a 0.6-kb message which encodes a 78-amino-acid protein with a putative leader peptide of 19 residues. The first 26 amino acids of the mature protein are identical to those of M-type glycophorin A (GPA), but the C-terminal domain (residues 27-59) differs significantly from those of glycophorins A and B (GPA and GPB). The GPE gene consists of four exons distributed over 30 kb of DNA, and its nucleotide sequence is homologous to those of the GPA and GPB genes in the 5' region, up to exon 3. Because of branch and splice site mutations, the GPE gene contains a large intron sequence partially used as exons in GPA and GPB genes. Compared to its counterpart in the GPB gene, exon 3 of the GPE gene contains several point mutations, an insertion of 24 bp, and a stop codon which shortens the reading frame. Downstream from exon 3, the GPE and the GPB sequences are virtually identical and include the same Alu repeats. Thus, it is likely that the GPE and GPB genes have evolved by a similar mechanism. From the analysis of the GPA, GPB and GPE genes in glycophorin variants [En(a-), S-s-U- and Mk], it is proposed that the three genes are organized in tandem on chromosome 4. Deletion events within this region may remove one or two structural gene(s) and may generate new hybrid structures in which the promoter region of one gene is positioned upstream from the body of another gene of the same family. This model of gene organization provides a basis with which to explain the diversity of the glycophorin gene family.  相似文献   

2.
One of the human glycophorin variants, Stones (Sta), has been shown to be the product of a hybrid gene of which the 5'-half derived from the glycophorin B (GPB) gene whereas the 3'-half derived from the glycophorin A (GPA) gene. The present study reveals the crossing-over point of this hybrid gene from the analysis of polymerase chain reaction products. The genomic sequences encompassing the region corresponding to exon 3 to exon 4 of GPA were amplified by polymerase chain reaction with oligonucleotide primers synthesized according to GPA and GPB genomic sequences (Kudo, S., and Fukuda, M. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 86, 4619-4623). After subcloning the products, the nucleotide sequences derived from GPA, GPB, and putative Sta genes were determined. Comparison of the nucleotide sequences of GPA, GPB, and Sta genes indicate that the crossing-over took place 200 base pairs upstream from the first nucleotide of exon 4. Intriguingly, the nucleotide sequence surrounding the putative crossing-over point is homologous to the crossing-over point proposed for haptoglobin genes (Maeda, N., McEvoy, S.M., Harris, H.F., Huisman, T.H.J., and Smithies, O. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 83, 7395-7399). These results suggest strongly that homologous recombination through unequal crossing-over can be facilitated by specific genomic elements, such as those in common in these two crossing-over events. The present study also revealed that this Sta individual has a variant GPA gene; substitution of adenine for guanine at the nucleotide for codon 39 results in substitution of lysine for arginine at amino acid 39, and loss of an SstI restriction site.  相似文献   

3.
The genomic structure of a human glycophorin variant, Miltenberger class V-like molecule (MiV*), was examined. Southern blot analysis of total genomic DNA revealed that the 5' half of the MiV* gene derived from glycophorin A (GPA) gene whereas the 3' half derived from glycophorin B (GPB) gene. This structure is reciprocal to another glycophorin variant, Sta, which has a GPB-GPA hybrid structure. The genomic sequences around the crossing-over point were amplified by polymerase chain reaction, and the sequences were determined. Comparison of the nucleotide sequences of the GPA, GPB, and MiV* genes indicates that the crossing-over point is located in the region around the 3' end of intron 3 of the GPA gene. This place is different from the crossing-over point for Sta, which was found to be highly homologous to that for haptoglobin-related genes. However, the nucleotide sequences within the presumptive crossing-over point for the MiV* gene were found to be homologous in a reverse orientation to the crossing-over point proposed for haptoglobin-related genes. These results suggest strongly that homologous recombination through unequal crossing over can be facilitated by specific genomic elements such as those in common for formation of MiV*, Sta, and haptoglobin-related genes. The present study also localized the gene of the third glycophorin, GPE, at chromosome 4, q31.1 band, the same locus as for the GPA and GPB genes. The results indicate that GPE was not involved in generating MiV* or Sta hybrid gene despite the fact that it is localized adjacent to the GPA and GPB genes.  相似文献   

4.
5.
1. Genomic DNA derived from individuals who lack glycophorin A (GPA), glycophorin B (GPB) or both of these proteins was subjected to Southern-blot analysis using GPA and GPB cDNA probes. 2. Bands on the Southern blots were assigned to the GPA gene, GPB gene or to a putative pseudogene. 3. Genomic DNA derived from an individual of the Mk phenotype was shown to have deletions in the GPA and GPB genes. The simplest model for the results obtained is that a single deletion spans the GPA and GPB genes in the individual studied.  相似文献   

6.
In humans, the allelic diversity of MNSs glycophorins (GP) occurs mainly through the recombinational modulation of silent exons (pseudoexons) in duplicated genes. To address the origin of such a mechanism, structures of GPA, GPB, and GPE were determined in chimpanzee, the only higher primate known to have achieved a three-gene framework as in humans. Pairwise comparison of the chimpanzee and human genes revealed a high degree of sequence identity and similar exon-intron organization. However, the chimpanzee GPA gene lacks a completely formed M- or N-defining sequence as well as a consensus sequence for the Asn-linked glycosylation. In the case of the GPB gene, exon III is expressed in the chimpanzee but silenced, as a pseudoexon, in the human. Therefore, the protein product in the chimpanzee bears a larger extracellular domain than in the human. For the GPE genes, exon III and exon IV have been inactivated by identical donor splice-site mutations in the two species. Nevertheless, the chimpanzee GPE-like mRNA appeared to be transcribed from a GPB/E composite gene containing no 24-bp insertion sequence in exon V for the transmembrane domain. These results suggest a divergent processing of exonic units from chimpanzee to human in which the inactivation of GPB exon III preserved a limited sequence repertoire for diversification of human glycophorins.Correspondence to: O.O. Blumenfeld  相似文献   

7.
Human red cell glycophorin A (GPA) enhances the expression of band 3 anion transport activity at the cell surface of Xenopus oocytes. This effect of GPA could occur in two ways, enhancement of band 3 anion transport function or enhancement of band 3 trafficking to the cell surface. We have examined the GPA effect using GPA mutants. We compared the sequences of GPA and its homolog glycophorin B (GPB; which does not facilitate band 3 cell-surface activity or trafficking) to identify candidate regions of GPA for study. We constructed several GPA or GPB mutants, including naturally occurring GPA/GPB hybrid molecules and insertion, deletion, and substitution mutants. We analyzed the effects of the mutant proteins on band 3-specific chloride transport and surface presentation using co-expression in Xenopus oocytes. We find that the C-terminal cytoplasmic tail of GPA enhances trafficking of band 3 to the cell surface, whereas the extracellular residues 68-70 increase the specific anion transport activity of band 3. In addition, examination of the oligomerization of GPA mutants showed that single amino acid substitutions N-terminal to the transmembrane domain greatly reduce SDS-stable GPA dimer formation, implying that regions outside the transmembrane domain of GPA are important for GPA dimer formation.  相似文献   

8.
Human red cells from donor Pj carry the Sta blood group antigen and an unusual sialoglycoprotein of 24 kDa molecular mass tentatively identified as a hybrid molecule of the anti-Lepore type [Blanchard et al. (1982) Biochem. J. 203, 419-426]. This component is resistant towards proteinase treatment and was purified from trypsin-treated and chymotrypsin-treated Pj erythrocytes. The molecule is composed of 99 amino acid residues whose alignment was established following manual and automatic sequencing of cyanogen bromide, trypsin, chymotrypsin and V8 proteinase peptides. The polypeptide chain comprises residues 1-26/28 of glycophorin B and residues 59/61-131 of glycophorin A. The sugar composition resembles that of glycophorin B, indicating the absence of an N-glycosidic chain. Identical sequences were obtained from analyses of the 24-kDa component purified from unrelated St(a+) donors. These results support the hypothesis that glycoprotein Pj represents a B-A hybrid molecule which is encoded by a new gene product resulting from an unequal crossing-over between the genes coding for the polypeptide chains of the glycophorins A and B. The novel molecule carries both N and Sta blood group antigens. The N activity is clearly understandable from the sequence of the five N-terminal residues (Leu and Glu at positions 1 and 5 respectively). Inhibition studies with the untreated and chemically modified hybrid glycoprotein indicate that the Sta determinant is located within residues approximately 25-30 of the molecule, which corresponds to the newly formed sequence found neither in glycophorin A nor in glycophorin B.  相似文献   

9.
Analysis of nucleotide sequences of the human glycophorin A (GPA) and glycophorin B (GPB) genes has indicated that the GPA gene most closely resembles the ancestral gene, whereas the GPB gene likely arose from the GPA gene by homologous recombination. To study the evolution of the glycophorin gene family in the hominoid primates, restricted DNA on Southern blots from man, pygmy chimpanzee, common chimpanzee, gorilla, orangutan, and gibbon was probed with cDNA fragments encoding the human GPA and GPB coding and 3-untranslated regions. This showed the presence in all of the hominoid primates of at least one GPA-like gene. In addition, at least one GPB-like gene was detected in man, both chimpanzee species, and gorilla, strongly suggesting that the event that produced the GPB gene occurred in the common ancestor of man-chimpanzee-gorilla. An unexpected finding in this study was the conservation ofEcoRI restriction sites relative to those of the other four enzymes used; the significance of this observation is unclear, but raises the question of nonrandomness ofEcoRI restriction sites in noncoding regions. Further analysis of the evolution of this multigene family, including nucleotide sequence analysis, will be useful in clarification of the evolutionary relationships of the hominoid primates, in correlation with the structure and function of the glycophorin molecules, and in assessment of the role of evolution in the autogenicity of glycophorin determinants.This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grants AM33463 and CA33000.  相似文献   

10.
Comparison of human and primate erythrocyte membrane sialoglycoproteins showed that common chimpanzee, dwarf chimpanzee, gorilla, orangutan, and gibbon have major periodic acid Schiff-positive proteins resembling human glycophorin A (GPA) monomer and dimer in electrophoretic mobility on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. Immunoperoxidase staining of Western blots with monoclonal antibodies to human GPA showed that these primate bands express some GPA antigenic determinants. A new sialoglycoprotein analogous to human glycophorin B (GPB) was detected in common chimpanzee. Although human MN blood group phenotype results from an amino acid polymorphism of GPA, Western blots showed that in chimpanzee sialoglycoprotein (GPAch) always expresses the M blood group, whereas chimpanzee sialoglycoprotein (GPBch) expresses either the N blood group or a null phenotype. This result explains the detection of M and MN, but not of N, blood group phenotypes in chimpanzee. GPBch has higher apparent m.w. than human GPB, is present in the erythrocyte membrane in greater quantity than human GPB, and contains trypsin cleavage site(s) and the 10F7 determinant (both found on human GPA but not GPB). Expression of human GPA antigenic determinants was consistent with the phylogeny of the hominoid primates; common and dwarf chimpanzee expressed most of the determinants tested, gorilla and orangutan an intermediate number, and gibbon and siamang the least. Of the GPA antigenic determinants examined, the MN blood group determinants were most consistently expressed during evolution of the hominoid primates. The results suggested that variability in expression of GPA antigenic determinants between species was due to both differences in amino acid sequence and glycosylation.  相似文献   

11.
Structure of the gene for human coagulation factor V.   总被引:22,自引:0,他引:22  
L D Cripe  K D Moore  W H Kane 《Biochemistry》1992,31(15):3777-3785
Activated factor V (Va) serves as an essential protein cofactor for the conversion of prothrombin to thrombin by factor Xa. Analysis of the factor V cDNA indicates that the protein contains several types of internal repeats with the following domain structure: A1-A2-B-A3-C1-C2. In this report we describe the isolation and characterization of genomic DNA coding for human factor V. The factor V gene contains 25 exons which range in size from 72 to 2820 bp. The structure of the gene for factor V is similar to the previously characterized gene for factor VIII. Based on the aligned amino acid sequences of the two proteins, 21 of the 24 intron-exon boundaries in the factor V gene occur at the same location as in the factor VIII gene. In both genes, the junctions of the A1-A2 and A2-A3 domains are each encoded by a single exon. In contrast, the boundaries between domains A3-C1 and C1-C2 occur at intron-exon boundaries, which is consistent with evolution through domain duplication and exon shuffling. The connecting region or B domain of factor V is encoded by a single large exon of 2820 bp. The corresponding exon of the factor VIII gene contains 3106 bp. The 5' and 3' ends of both of these exons encode sequences homologous to the carboxyl-terminal end of domain A2 and the amino-terminal end of domain A3 in ceruloplasmin. There is otherwise no homology between the B domain exons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
13.
We have cloned portions of the glycophorin C (sialoglycoprotein beta) gene from individuals with red cells of normal, Gerbich and Yus phenotypes. The clones contain up to three exons of the glycophorin C gene (designated exons 2, 3 and 4). Analysis by restriction mapping and DNA sequencing confirmed that the deletions causing the Gerbich and Yus phenotypes are located entirely within the glycophorin C gene. Sequencing of the normal gene showed that not only do exon 2 and exon 3 have related DNA sequences, but also that both the 5' and 3' flanking intronic DNA sequences are almost identical. The two variant genes each lack a different exon: the Yus type gene lacks exon 2, whereas the Gerbich-type gene lacks exon 3. We suggest that the observed deletions are due to recombination between the regions of homologous intronic repeats. We also provide evidence that an unequal cross-over mechanism may be responsible for a number of observed glycophorin C gene rearrangements, including an insertion mutation in Lewis II (Lsa)-type red cells that has not previously been reported.  相似文献   

14.
15.
16.
Beta-lactoglobulin is the major whey protein in the milk of ruminants and is expressed in the mammary gland during pregnancy and lactation. Here we describe the isolation and characterization of genomic clones encoding ovine beta-lactoglobulin. Two very similar but non-identical, types of beta-lactoglobulin clone were obtained. DNA sequence analysis of one of these showed that the gene is 4900 bases long and contains seven exons. It codes for a protein of 180 amino acid residues, containing an 18-residue signal peptide, within exons I to VI; exon VII is non-coding. We show that the genes encoding serum retinol binding protein, major urinary protein, alpha-1-acid glycoprotein and apolipoprotein D have a similar organization of exons and introns to beta-lactoglobulin. In particular, a comparison between beta-lactoglobulin and retinol binding protein shows that both genes encode equivalent elements of three-dimensional protein structure within analogous exons. These proteins are all members of a large, diverse family of secretory proteins, many of which function in binding small hydrophobic molecules.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Structure of the gene for rat nucleolar protein B23   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
  相似文献   

19.
20.
Human glycophorins alpha and delta (or A and B) specify the MNSs blood group antigens; they exhibit considerable structural variation among populations. We show that two variant phenotypes of Miltenberger class III and VI are encoded by similar hybrid glycophorin genes in a delta-alpha-delta arrangement. Restriction mapping identified altered fragments unique to the MiIII and MiVI genes. Genomic sequences spanning exons 2 to 4 of the two genes were obtained by allele-specific polymerase chain reaction. Restriction analysis and direct sequencing of the amplified DNA revealed that MiIII and MiVI genes are identical to the delta gene except that, in both, an internal segment of the delta gene has been replaced by its homologous counterpart of the alpha gene, resulting in a delta-alpha-delta hybrid structure. In the process of hybrid formation a portion of alpha exon 3 and intron 3, that carries a functional 5' splicing signal, has been fused to an exon-like sequence in the delta gene that retains a 3' but lacks a 5' splicing signal. These rearrangements created a composite exon resulting in the expression of the ordinarily unexpressed delta gene sequence and conferred the hybrid proteins with new antigenic specificities. The expression of this sequence in MiIII glycophorin is directly demonstrated by protein sequencing. MiIII and MiVI genes differ in the location of upstream (delta-alpha) and downstream (alpha-delta) breakpoints and in the length of sequence replacement. The delta-alpha breakpoints of the two genes occur at different locations within a 35-base pair sequence of exon 3 that is clustered with multiple inverted repeats, whereas the alpha-delta breakpoints reside downstream in two dissimilar blocks of sequences of intron 3. The minimal length of the delta gene sequence that has been replaced by the alpha gene is 55 base pairs in the MiIII gene and 131 base pairs in the MiVI gene. Such segmental DNA transfers may have proceeded unidirectionally through the mechanisms of gene conversion.  相似文献   

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