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1.
RNA molecules which are restricted to the nucleus in mouse L-cells were characterized by the technique of RNA/DNA hybridization. Competition of cytoplasmic RNA with labeled nuclear RNA of various sizes revealed that the RNA restricted to the cell nucleus is heterogeneous in size. Competition for sites on fractions of mouse DNA of various base compositions indicated that this unstable RNA is also heterogeneous in base composition. Fractionation of nuclei into three subfractions failed to separate the uniquely nuclear RNA from the precursors of cytoplasmic RNA. The significance of the selective transport of RNA from the nucleus to the cytoplasm and its importance in the control of gene activity in eucaryotic cells is discussed.  相似文献   

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The natural bases of nucleic acids form a great variety of base pairs with at least two hydrogen bonds between them. They are classified in twelve main families, with the Watson–Crick family being one of them. In a given family, some of the base pairs are isosteric between them, meaning that the positions and the distances between the C1′ carbon atoms are very similar. The isostericity of Watson–Crick pairs between the complementary bases forms the basis of RNA helices and of the resulting RNA secondary structure. Several defined suites of non-Watson–Crick base pairs assemble into RNA modules that form recurrent, rather regular, building blocks of the tertiary architecture of folded RNAs. RNA modules are intrinsic to RNA architecture are therefore disconnected from a biological function specifically attached to a RNA sequence. RNA modules occur in all kingdoms of life and in structured RNAs with diverse functions. Because of chemical and geometrical constraints, isostericity between non-Watson–Crick pairs is restricted and this leads to higher sequence conservation in RNA modules with, consequently, greater difficulties in extracting 3D information from sequence analysis. Nucleic acid helices have to be recognised in several biological processes like replication or translational decoding. In polymerases and the ribosomal decoding site, the recognition occurs on the minor groove sides of the helical fragments. With the use of alternative conformations, protonated or tautomeric forms of the bases, some base pairs with Watson–Crick-like geometries can form and be stabilized. Several of these pairs with Watson–Crick-like geometries extend the concept of isostericity beyond the number of isosteric pairs formed between complementary bases. These observations set therefore limits and constraints to geometric selection in molecular recognition of complementary Watson–Crick pairs for fidelity in replication and translation processes.  相似文献   

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A comparative study has been made of the arrangement of base sequences in the ribosomal RNA cistrons of Escherichia coliand rabbit DNA. This was accomplished by examination of the thermal stability profiles of DNA/RNA hybrids formed by the two types of ribosomal RNA under various conditions. The thermal stabilities of ribosomal RNA hybrids of rabbit origin are more dependent on the conditions of reaction during the formation and are always lower than those of E. coli RNA. It is concluded that the rabbit ribosomal RNA hybrids are formed mainly from mismatching between RNA molecules and DNA sites other than those from which they were transcribed. Thus, the cluster of ribosomal RNA cistrons in a mammalian DNA, representing a historical series of tandem duplications, exhibits intercistronic base sequence divergence. This research was supported by a research grant from the National Science Foundation (GB 6099) and a predoctoral traineeship (to R.L.M.) from the U.S. Public Health Service.  相似文献   

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L Goldstein  C Ko 《Cell》1974,2(4):259-269
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4.5SH RNA is a 94-nt small RNA with unknown function. This RNA is known to be present in the mouse, rat, and hamster cells; however, it is not found in human, rabbit, and chicken. In the mouse genome, the 4.5SH RNA gene is a part of a long (4.2 kb) tandem repeat ( approximately 800 copies) unit. Here, we found that 4.5SH RNA genes are present only in rodents of six families that comprise the Myodonta clade: Muridae, Cricetidae, Spalacidae, Rhizomyidae, Zapodidae, and Dipodidae. The analysis of complementary DNA derived from the rodents of these families showed general evolutionary conservation of 4.5SH RNA and some intraspecific heterogeneity of these RNA molecules. 4.5SH RNA genes in the Norway rat, mole rat, hamster and jerboa genomes are included in the repeated sequences. In the jerboa genome these repeats are 4.0-kb long and arranged tandemly, similar to the corresponding arrangements in the mouse and rat genomic DNA. Sequencing of the rat and jerboa DNA repeats containing 4.5SH RNA genes showed fast evolution of the gene-flanking sequences. The repeat sequences of the distantly related rodents (mouse and rat vs. jerboa) have no apparent similarity except for the 4.5SH RNA gene itself. Conservation of the 4.5SH RNA gene nucleotide sequence indicates that this RNA is likely to be under selection pressure and, thus, may have a function. The repeats from the different rodents have similar lengths and contain many simple short repeats. The data obtained suggest that long insertions, deletions, and simple sequence amplifications significantly contribute in the evolution of the repeats containing 4.5SH RNA genes. The 4.5SH RNA gene seems to have originated 50-85 MYA in a Myodonta ancestor from a copy of the B1 short interspersed element. The amplification of the gene with the flanking sequences could result from the supposed cellular requirement of the intensive synthesis of 4.5SH RNA. Further Myodonta evolution led to dramatic changes of the repeat sequences in every lineage with the conservation of the 4.5SH RNA genes only. This gene, like some other relatively recently originated genes, could be a useful model for studying generation and evolution of non-protein-coding genes.  相似文献   

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Polyadenylated RNA complementary to repetitive DNA in mouse L-cells.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
G U Ryffel  B J McCarthy 《Biochemistry》1975,14(7):1385-1389
Complementary DNA, synthesized with L-cell polyadenylated RNA as template, renatured with total L-cell DNA to about 70%. About 30% complementary to unique sequence DNA and another 10 and 30% corresponded to sequences about 20- and 500-fold repetitive. Complementary DNA was fractionated after partial hybridization with total polyadenylated RNA to obtain preparations enriched or impoverished in complements of the most frequent polyadenylated RNA. Renaturation of these complementary DNA fractions with L-cell DNA revealed that most frequent RNAs are transcribed from repetitive DNA sequences, Complementary DNA, density labeled with bromodeoxyuridine, was fractionated by renaturation with L-cell DNA to yield fractions enriched in repetitive and unique sequence DNA. The denisty labeled complementary DNA was purified by equilibrium centrifiguation in an alkaline Cs2SO4 gradient. The complementary DNA representing mainly repetitive DNA sequences hybridized preferentially to frequent polyadenylated RNA.  相似文献   

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Different classes of RNA are exported from the nucleus by distinct factors. We demonstrate that U1 snRNA is exported like an mRNA on insertion of a pre-mRNA intron or either sense or antisense mRNA exon sequences. mRNA-specific factors are recruited onto the spliced or elongated U1 RNA whereas U snRNA-specific factors are not, suggesting that an unstructured region of sufficient length in an RNA acts as a dominant determinant of mRNA identity. After export, spliced U1 RNA undergoes cytoplasmic maturation but is not reimported into the nucleus. These data provide insight into mechanisms for discrimination of different classes of nuclear RNA and demonstrate that two RNAs of identical sequence can have distinct cytoplasmic fates depending on their mode of export.  相似文献   

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4.5S RNA is a group of RNAs 90 to 94 nucleotides long (length polymorphism due to a varying number of UMP residues at the 3' end) that form hydrogen bonds with poly(A)-terminated RNAs isolated from mouse, hamster, or rat cells (W. R. Jelinek and L. Leinwand, Cell 15:205-214, 1978; F. Harada, N. Kato, and H.-O. Hoshino, Nucleic Acids Res. 7:909-917, 1979). We have cloned a gene that encodes the 4.5S RNA. It is repeated 850 (sigma = 54) times per haploid mouse genome and 690 (sigma = 59) times per haploid rat genome. Most, if not all, of the repeats in both species are arrayed in tandem. The repeat unit is 4,245 base pairs long in mouse DNA (the complete base sequence of one repeat unit is presented) and approximately 5,300 base pairs in rat DNA. This accounts for approximately 3 X 10(6) base pairs of genomic DNA in each species, or 0.1% of the genome. Cultured murine erythroleukemia cells contain 13,000 molecules per cell of the 4.5S RNA, which can be labeled to equilibrium in 90 min by [3H]uridine added to the culture medium. The 4.5S RNA, therefore, has a short half-life. The 4.5S RNA can be cross-linked in vivo by 4'-aminomethyl-4,5',8-trimethylpsoralen to murine erythroleukemia cell poly(A)-terminated cytoplasmic RNA contained in ribonucleoprotein particles.  相似文献   

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A cDNA library in pBR322 was prepared with cytoplasmic poly(A)+RNA from mouse liver cells. From 1 to 1.5% of clones hybridized to either B1 or B2 ubiquitous repetitive sequences. Several clones hybridizing to a B2 repeat were partially sequenced. The full-length B2 sequence was found at the 3'-end of abundant 20S poly(A)+RNA (designated as B2+mRNAx) within the non-coding part of it. B2+mRNAx is concentrated in mouse liver polysomes and absent from cytoplasm of Ehrlich carcinoma cells. The B2 sequence seems to be located at the 3'-end of some other mRNAs as well. To determine the orientation of the B2 sequence in different RNAs, its two strands were labeled, electrophoretically separated, and used for hybridization with Northern blotts containing nuclear, cytoplasmic and polysomal RNAs. In nuclear RNA, the B2 sequence is present in both orientations; in polysomal and cytoplasmic poly(A)+RNAs, only one ("canonical") strand of it can be detected. Low molecular weight poly(A)+B2+RNA [1] also contains the same strand of the B2 element. The conclusion has been drawn that only one its strand can survive the processing. This strand contains promoter-like sequences and AATAAA blocks. The latter can be used in some cases by the cell as mRNA polyadenylation signals.  相似文献   

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The number of distinct functional classes of single-stranded RNAs (ssRNAs) and the number of sequences representing them are substantial and continue to increase. Organizing this data in an evolutionary context is essential, yet traditional comparative sequence analyses require that homologous sites can be identified. This prevents comparative analysis between sequences of different functional classes that share no site-to-site sequence similarity. Analysis within a single evolutionary lineage also limits evolutionary inference because shared ancestry confounds properties of molecular structure and function that are historically contingent with those that are imposed for biophysical reasons. Here, we apply a method of comparative analysis to ssRNAs that is not restricted to homologous sequences, and therefore enables comparison between distantly related or unrelated sequences, minimizing the effects of shared ancestry. This method is based on statistical similarities in nucleotide base composition among different functional classes of ssRNAs. In order to denote base composition unambiguously, we have calculated the fraction G+A and G+U content, in addition to the more commonly used fraction G+C content. These three parameters define RNA composition space, which we have visualized using interactive graphics software. We have examined the distribution of nucleotide composition from 15 distinct functional classes of ssRNAs from organisms spanning the universal phylogenetic tree and artificial ribozymes evolved in vitro. Surprisingly, these distributions are biased consistently in G+A and G+U content, both within and between functional classes, regardless of the more variable G+C content. Additionally, an analysis of the base composition of secondary structural elements indicates that paired and unpaired nucleotides, known to have different evolutionary rates, also have significantly different compositional biases. These universal compositional biases observed among ssRNAs sharing little or no sequence similarity suggest, contrary to current understanding, that base composition biases constitute a convergent adaptation among a wide variety of molecular functions.  相似文献   

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