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1.
The small ring derivative of Saccharomyces cerevisiae chromosome III, which was formed by a cross-over between HML on the left arm and HMR on the right arm, contains three Ty elements. The class II element Ty 1-17 lies immediately centromere-distal to LEU2 on the left arm while two class I elements are tandemly arranged distal to PGK on the right arm. We have sequenced the regions of chromosome III surrounding Ty 1-17 and have defined a region where a number of transposition events have occurred. This region is flanked by the 5' ends of two tRNA genes, tRNA3Glu on the centromere distal side and tRNA3Leu immediately in front of LEU2. Close to the tRNA3Glu gene there is a region containing degenerate delta sequences organised in opposite orientations. Immediately distal to Ty 1-17 there are two complete solo delta elements, one inserted into the other. The sequence indicates that these two delta sequences were inserted into chromosome II by separate transposition events. A model is presented to explain how this structure arose and the role of solo delta elements in transposon propagation and maintenance is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
J J Wasmuth  L Vock Hall 《Cell》1984,36(3):697-707
Chinese hamster ovary cell hybrids were constructed that are heterozygous for two markers, leuS and emtB, linked to the long arm of chromosome 2. In addition, the chromosome 2 carrying the wild-type leuS and emtB alleles contains, on its short arm, a homogeneously staining region (hsr) in which the gene encoding dihydrofolate reductase (dhfr) is amplified approximately 50-fold. This provides a convenient cytogenetic and biochemical means to distinguish the chromosome 2s from the different parents. Analysis of emetine-resistant segregants isolated from such hybrids identified three distinct classes of segregants. One rare class of segregants loses the wild-type leuS and emtB gene functions on the long arm of the hsr chromosome 2 (H-2) but retains the amplified dhfr genes on the opposite arm. Detailed genetic analysis of two such segregants that did not arise by chromosome loss or deletion revealed that new gene linkage relationships had been established on the H-2 chromosome in each, demonstrating that the segregation events in these cell lines involved mitotic recombination.  相似文献   

3.
Cap G (formerly called macrophage capping protein or gCap39) is a member of the gelsolin/villin fanlily of actin-regulatory proteins. Unlike all other members of this family, Cap G caps the barbed ends of actin filaments, but does not sever them. This protein is half the molecular weight and contains half the number of repeat subunits (3 vs 6) of gelsolin and villin, suggesting that these two proteins may have arisen by gene duplication of the Cap G gene. To investigate this possibility we have cloned and sequenced the human Cap G gene (gene symbol CAPG). The gene is 16.6 kb in size, contains 10 exons and 9 introns and is located on the proximal short arm of chromosome 2. The open reading frame is 6.9 kb, having 9 exons and 8 introns. This region contains 3 splice sites that are nearly identical to the human gelsolin gene, but shares only one with villin, indicating that CAPG is more closely related to gelsolin. Further comparisons of these three genes, however, indicate that the evolutionary steps resulting in human gelsolin and villin are likely to have been more complex than a simple tandem duplication of the Cap G gene.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The outer dynein arm-docking complex (ODA-DC) is a microtubule-associated structure that targets the outer dynein arm to its binding site on the flagellar axoneme (Takada et al. 2002. Mol. Biol. Cell 13, 1015-1029). The ODA-DC of Chlamydomonas contains three proteins, referred to as DC1, DC2, and DC3. We here report the isolation and sequencing of genomic and full-length cDNA clones encoding DC3. The sequence predicts a 21,341 Da protein with four EF-hands that is a member of the CTER (calmodulin, troponin C, essential and regulatory myosin light chains) group and is most closely related to a predicted protein from Plasmodium. The DC3 gene, termed ODA14, is intronless. Chlamydomonas mutants that lack DC3 exhibit slow, jerky swimming because of loss of some but not all outer dynein arms. Some outer doublet microtubules without arms had a "partial" docking complex, indicating that DC1 and DC2 can assemble in the absence of DC3. In contrast, DC3 cannot assemble in the absence of DC1 or DC2. Transformation of a DC3-deletion strain with the wild-type DC3 gene rescued both the motility phenotype and the structural defect, whereas a mutated DC3 gene was incompetent to rescue. The results indicate that DC3 is important for both outer arm and ODA-DC assembly.  相似文献   

6.

Background  

The male-specific region of the mouse Y chromosome long arm (MSYq) contains three known highly multi-copy X-Y homologous gene families, Ssty1/2, Sly and Asty. Deletions on MSYq lead to teratozoospermia and subfertility or infertility, with a sex ratio skew in the offspring of subfertile MSYqdel males  相似文献   

7.
8.
Tyrosinase is the major enzyme responsible for the formation of melanin pigment and is found throughout the animal kingdom. In humans, the tyrosinase gene (TYR) maps to the long arm of chromosome 11 at band q14→q21, while a tyrosinase related gene (TYRL) maps to the short arm of chromosome 11 at pll.2°Cen. We and others have found that the TYRL locus contains sequences that are similar to exons IV and V of the authentic tyrosinase gene but lacks sequences of exons I, II, and III. In an attempt to understand the evolution of the human tyrosinase gene, we have analyzed TYR and TYRL in primates and have found that exons IV and V of the chimpanzee and gorilla TYR are very similar to the human, with the gorilla sequence being more similar than the chimpanzee. We have also found that the gorilla but not the chimpanzee contains a TYRL locus similar to the human TYRL locus.  相似文献   

9.
The variety of common spring wheat Chelyaba 75 carries a translocation from Aegilops speltoides Tausch in the chromosome 2D, which contains the leaf rust resistance gene and gametocidal genes. The length of this translocation was determined by molecular-genetic analysis. It is shown that the long arm of chromosome 2D is completely replaced by the long arm of chromosome 2S; it is possible that translocation involves the near-centromere region of the short arm. According to molecular analysis data, the translocation from Ae. speltoides in the Chelyaba 75 variety differs from the 2S chromosome region carrying the Lr35/Sr39 genes. This makes it possible to designate the leaf rust resistance gene of the Chelyaba 75 as LrSp2. The inheritance of LrSp2 in four populations from crossing Chelyaba 75 with different varieties of common wheat was studied. Estimation of leaf rust resistance of F2 and F3 hybrids in field conditions (2015–2016) revealed the absence of susceptible plants. The presence of 2DS.2SL translocation in hybrid plants was confirmed by molecular analysis. The results indicate the action of the gametocidal gene localized in the 2DS.2SL translocation and the fact that its tight linkage to the LrSp2 gene is inherited in a series of generations.  相似文献   

10.
Jeyaprakash A  Hoy MA 《Gene》2007,391(1-2):264-274
The complete mitochondrial genome of the phytoseiid Metaseiulus occidentalis (Arthropoda: Chelicerata: Acari: Phytoseiidae) has been sequenced. It is 24,961 bp in length and contains a 14,695-bp unique region, a 345-bp triplicated region, and a 9921-bp duplicated region, in that order. The A+T content of the unique region is 76.9% and contains 11 protein coding (COI-III; ATP6-8; CytB; ND1, 2, 4, 5 and 4L), two ribosomal RNA (srRNA and lrRNA), 22 transfer RNA (tRNA) genes, and two copies of D-loop control sequence. Two genes (ND3 and 6) appear to be missing, but there is a large intergenic spacer (390 bp) present, which could contain ND3 if a different codon usage is employed. The gene order is completely different from the pattern in all other known chelicerates, including the horseshoe crab Limulus polyphemus [Lavrov et al., Mol. Biol. Evol., 2000; 17:813-824]. All the inferred tRNA genes are missing the TPsiC arm, but this arm has fused with the variable arm to generate a TV replacement loop. The duplicated region (9921 bp) contains 18 genes in the same order as in the unique region from CytB to tRNA-His, plus one copy of D-loop control sequence (311 bp) and a partial tRNA-Leu2 sequence (34 bp). The small triplicated region (345 bp) contains a D-loop control sequence (311 bp) and a partial tRNA-Leu2 sequence (34 bp). Because of these anomalies, amplifying sequences posed technical difficulties, but were accomplished by using a primer-walking strategy and increasing the AT content to 75% in the high-fidelity PCR dNTP mix. This is the first phytoseiid mitochondrial genome to be completely sequenced and the largest (25 kb) detected from the Chelicerata.  相似文献   

11.
The insect allatostatins are neurohormones, acting on the corpora allata (where they block the release of juvenile hormone) and on the insect gut (where they block smooth muscle contraction). We screened the "Drosophila Genome Project" database with electronic sequences corresponding to various insect allatostatins. This resulted in alignment with a DNA sequence coding for some Drosophila allatostatins (drostatins). Using PCR with oligonucleotide primers directed against the presumed exons of this Drosophila allatostatin gene and subsequent 3'- and 5'-RACE, we were able to clone its cDNA. The Drosophila allatostatin preprohormone contains four amino acid sequences that after processing would give rise to four Drosophila allatostatins: Val-Glu-Arg-Tyr-Ala-Phe-Gly-Leu-NH(2) (drostatin-1), Leu-Pro-Val-Tyr-Asn-Phe-Gly-Leu-NH(2) (drostatin-2), Ser-Arg-Pro-Tyr-Ser-Phe-Gly-Leu-NH(2) (drostatin-3), and Thr-Thr-Arg-Pro-Gln-Pro-Phe-Asn-Phe-Gly-Leu-NH(2) (drostatin-4). Drostatin-2 is identical to helicostatin-2 (11-18) and drostatin-3 to helicostatin-3, two neurohormones previously isolated from the moth Helicoverpa armigera. Furthermore, drostatin-3 has previously been isolated from Drosophila itself. Drostatins-1 and -4 are novel members of the insect allatostatin neuropeptide family. The Drosophila allatostatin preprohormone gene contains two introns and three exons. The gene is located on the right arm of the third chromosome, position 96A-B. The existence of at least four different Drosophila allatostatins opens the possibility of a differential action of some of these hormones on the two recently cloned Drosophila allatostatin receptors, DAR-1 and -2. This is the first report on an allatostatin preprohormone from Drosophila.  相似文献   

12.
Two genes, SSGP-11A1 and SSGP-12A1, have been isolated that encodes proteins with a secretion signal peptide at theN-terminals from the Hessian fly (Mayetiola destructor (Say)). The SSGP-11A1 gene contains one small intron (89 bp) and encodes a putative protein with 79 amino acids. The first 18 amino acids constitute a putative secretion signal peptide. The SSGP-12A1 gene contains three small introns and encodes a putative protein with 234 amino acids. The first 19 amino acids constitute a putative secretion signal peptide. Northern blot analysis revealed that both of the genes are primarily expressed in the salivary glands of Hessian fly larvae, the feeding stage of the insect. These observations are consistent with the possibility that the proteins encoded by them are secreted into host plants during feeding. Even though both genes are exclusively expressed in Hessian fly larvae, the expression profiles between them were quite different in insects at different instars. The SSGP-11A1 gene was expressed in all instars of larvae while the SSGP-12A1 gene was almost exclusively expressed in the first instar larvae. The differential expression suggests that the proteins encoded by these two genes may perform different functions. In situ hybridization revealed that the SSGP-11A1 gene is located on the short arm of chromosome A1 while SSGP-12A1 gene is on the long arm of chromosome A2.  相似文献   

13.
The outer dynein arm-docking complex (ODA-DC) targets the outer dynein arm to its correct binding site on the flagellar axoneme. The Chlamydomonas ODA-DC contains three proteins; loss of any one prevents normal assembly of the outer arm, leading to a slow, jerky swimming phenotype. We showed previously that the smallest ODA-DC subunit, DC3, has four EF-hands (Casey, D. M., Inaba, K., Pazour, G. J., Takada, S., Wakabayashi, K., Wilkerson, C. G., Kamiya, R., and Witman, G. B. (2003) Mol. Biol. Cell 14, 3650-3663). Two of the EF-hands fit the consensus pattern for calcium binding, and one of these contains two cysteine residues within its binding loop. To determine whether the predicted EF-hands are functional, we purified bacterially expressed wild-type DC3 and analyzed its calcium-binding potential in the presence and absence of dithiothreitol and Mg2+. The protein bound one calcium ion with an affinity (Kd) of approximately 1 x 10-5 m. Calcium binding was observed only in the presence of dithiothreitol and thus is redox-sensitive. DC3 also bound Mg2+ at physiological concentrations but with a much lower affinity. Changing the essential glutamate to glutamine in both EF-hands eliminated the calcium binding activity of the bacterially expressed protein. To investigate the role of the EF-hands in vivo, we transformed the modified DC3 gene into a Chlamydomonas insertional mutant lacking DC3. The transformed strain swam normally, assembled a normal number of outer arms, and had a normal photoshock response, indicating that the Glu to Gln mutations did not affect ODA-DC assembly, outer arm assembly, or Ca2+-mediated outer arm activity. Thus, DC3 is a true calcium-binding protein, but the function of this activity remains unknown.  相似文献   

14.
By screening a human genomic library with an interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) cDNA probe, we have isolated a 15 kb clone which contains the entire coding region of the gene as expressed in monocytes, and includes 6 kb of 5'-upstream sequence. The gene contains four exons which code for the secreted form of the IL-1ra, however, our clone does not contain the alternative first exon used to generate an intracellular form of the protein as the protein as found in epithelial cells. Analysis of the sequence reveals a consensus TATA box, and three Alu repeats, two of which are in the upstream region and one in intron 3. The sequence also reveals an 86 bp motif tandomly repeated four times within intron 2, and may reflect the polymorphism known to exist in this region of the gene. By in-situ fluorescence hybridization we have shown that the IL-1ra gene is found on the long arm of chromosome 2 and maps to 2q13-14.1. Previous studies have revealed that IL-1 alpha, and IL-1 beta and both type I and type II forms of the IL-1 receptor all map close to this region of chromosome 2.  相似文献   

15.
The gene coding for the human ventricular/slow twitch myosin alkali light chain isoform was isolated and sequenced. It was found to contain a total of seven exons, the last of which is completely 3'-untranslated sequence. Comparison of this gene sequence with that of the various fast twitch skeletal isoform gene sequences revealed that the exon-intron arrangement is conserved within the myosin alkali light chain gene family. In fact the introns are in exactly the same positions within analogous codons. Comparison of the derived amino acid sequence from the human ventricular/slow twitch isoform gene with that of other isoform protein sequences indicated that the protein encoded by this gene is more homologous to the chicken cardiac isoform protein sequence than to any of the other protein sequences. These results indicate that the gene duplication which gave rise to the ventricular/slow twitch and fast twitch isoform genes must have occurred prior to the divergence of mammals and avians. We have also localized the human ventricular/slow twitch isoform gene to the short arm of human chromosome 3. Interestingly the corresponding mouse gene has been mapped to the distal region of mouse chromosome 9 which contains a conserved syntenic group of genes that map to the short arm of human chromosome 3.  相似文献   

16.
We have used meiotic mapping techniques to locate the position of the repeating ribosomal DNA (rDNA) genes of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We found that the rDNA genes are located on the right arm of chromosome XII, approximately 45 map units centromere distal to the gene gal2. Together with mapping data from previous studies, this result suggests that the tandem array of rDNA genes contains at least two junctions with the non-rDNA of the yeast chromosome. In addition, we observed segregation patterns of the rDNA genes consistent with meiotic recombination within the rDNA gene tandem array in 3 of the 59 tetrads examined.  相似文献   

17.
The expression of the gene for threonyl-tRNA synthetase (thrS) is negatively autoregulated at the translational level in Escherichia coli. The synthetase binds to a region of the thrS leader mRNA upstream from the ribosomal binding site inhibiting subsequent translation. The leader mRNA consists of four structural domains. The present work shows that mutations in these four domains affect expression and/or regulation in different ways. Domain 1, the 3' end of the leader, contains the ribosomal binding site, which appears not to be essential for synthetase binding. Mutations in this domain probably affect regulation by changing the competition between the ribosome and the synthetase for binding to the leader. Domain 2, 3' from the ribosomal binding site, is a stem and loop with structural similarities to the tRNA(Thr) anticodon arm. In tRNAs the anticodon loop is seven nucleotides long, mutations that increase or decrease the length of the anticodon-like loop of domain 2 from seven nucleotides abolish control. The nucleotides in the second and third positions of the anticodon-like sequence are essential for recognition and the nucleotide in the wobble position is not, again like tRNA(Thr). The effect of mutations in domain 3 indicate that it acts as an articulation between domains 2 and 4. Domain 4 is a stable arm that has similarities to the acceptor arm of tRNA(Thr) and is shown to be necessary for regulation. Based on this mutational analysis and previous footprinting experiments, it appears that domains 2 and 4, those analogous to tRNA(Thr), are involved in binding the synthetase which inhibits translation probably by interfering with ribosome loading at the nearby translation initiation site.  相似文献   

18.
Brittle rachis is a head shattering mechanism of barley. Two tightly linked complementary genes, btr1 and btr2, were believed to control the non-brittle rachis trait. Position of non-brittle rachis loci btr1btr2 on the short arm of Chromosome 3 was investigated using RFLP markers. Two approaches were employed. First, a Hordeum vulgare subsp. spontaneum fragment that confers brittleness in a cv. Bowman near isogenic line was detected. This fragment is 18-33 cM in length and contains MWG798B, ABG057, MWG014, BCD706 and KFP216 markers of the short arm of Chromosome 3. In the second approach, position of btr1 locus in a H. vulgare subsp. spontaneum (Wadi Qilt 23-38)xH. vulgare subsp. vulgare (cv. Harrington) cross was detected using a selective genotyping approach in BC2F1 generation. F-tests and analysis of genotypic compositions of BC2F1 lines showed that btr1 locus, and supposedly the tightly linked btr2 locus, is in 4.3 cM KFP216-RisP114 interval of short arm of Chromosome 3. Results also yielded clues for the presence of at least two additional loci that affect the non-brittle rachis trait. Allelism tests using genotypes with known non-brittle rachis gene compositions provided additional evidence for presence of such loci.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Synaptobrevins 1 and 2 are small integral membrane proteins specific for synaptic vesicles in neurons. Two cosmid clones containing the human genes encoding synaptobrevins 1 and 2 (gene symbols SYB1 and SYB2, respectively) were isolated and characterized. The coding regions of the synaptobrevin genes are highly homologous to each other and are interrupted at identical positions by introns of different size and sequence. Each gene is organized into five exons whose boundaries correspond to those of the protein domains. Exon I contains part of the initiator methionine codon whereas exon II encodes the variable and immunogenic amino-terminal domain of the synaptobrevins. The third exon comprises the highly conserved central domain of the synaptobrevins, exon IV encodes most of the transmembrane region, and exon V contains the last residues of the transmembrane region and the small intravesicular carboxyl terminus. Comparisons of the synaptobrevin sequences in five species from Drosophila with man indicate a selective conservation of sequences adjacent to the synaptic vesicle surface, suggesting a function at the membrane-cystosol interface. The chromosomal localizations of the human and mouse SYB1 and SYB2 genes were determined using hybrid cell lines. SYB1 was localized to the short arm of human chromosome 12 and to mouse chromosome 6 whereas SYB2 was found on the distal portion of the short arm of human chromosome 17 and on mouse chromosome 11. A PstI restriction fragment length polymorphism was identified at the SYB2 locus.  相似文献   

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