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1.
We have isolated and characterised one PAC clone (dJ233C1) containing a linkage between alphoid and non-alphoid DNA. The non-alphoid DNA was found to map at the pericentromeric region of chromosome 20, both on p and q sides, and to contain homologies with one contig (ctg176, Sanger Centre), also located in the same chromosome region. At variance with the chromosome specificity shown by the majority of non-alphoid DNA, a subset of alphoid repeats derived from the PAC yielded FISH hybridisation signals located at the centromeric region of several human chromosomes, belonging to three different suprachromosomal families. The evolutionary conservation of this boundary region was investigated by comparative FISH experiments on chromosomes from great apes. The non-alphoid DNA was found to have undergone events of expansion and transposition to different pericentromeric regions of great apes chromosomes. Alphoid sequences revealed a very wide distribution of FISH signals in the great apes. The pattern was substantially discordant with the data available in the literature, which is essentially derived from the central alphoid subset. These results add further support to the emerging opinion that the pericentromeric regions are high plastics, and that the alpha satellite junctions do not share the evolutionary history with the main subsets.  相似文献   

2.
The predominant chromosomal locations of human satellite I DNA were detected using fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH). Synthetic deoxyoligonucleotides designed from consensus sequences of the simple sequence repeats of satellite 1 were used as probes. The most abundant satellite I repeat, the-A-B-A-B-A-form, is located at the pericentromeric regions of chromosomes 3, 4, 13, 14, 15, 21, and 22. The less abundant-B-B-B-form was not detected on chromosome 4, but was present at all the other locations. A variation of FISH that allows strand-specific hybridization of single-stranded probes (CO-FISH) determined that the human satellite I sequences are predominantly arranged in head-to-tail fashtion along the DNA strand.  相似文献   

3.
Satellite sequences are an important part of the pericentromeric regions in mammalian genomes; they play a relevant role in chromosome stability and DNA hypomethylation of these sequences has been reported in ICF syndrome and in some cancers that are closely associated with chromosomal abnormalities. Epigenetic modifications of satellite sequences and their consequences have not been extensively studied in human cells. In the present work, we evaluated satellite 2 methylation patterns in human lymphocytes exposed to 5-azacytidine (5-azaC) and assessed the relationship between these patterns and chromosome missegregation. Human lymphocytes were exposed to 10μM 5-azaC for 24, 48, and 72h. Segregation errors were evaluated in binucleate cells using FISH against pericentromeric regions of chromosomes 1, 9, and 16. DNA methylation patterns were evaluated by immunodetection, and by bisulfite plus urea conversion and sequencing. We have identified that 5-azaC induced missegregation of chromosomes 1 and 16, which have highly methylated satellite 2, after 72h of exposure. Chromosome methylation patterns showed a notable decrease in pericentromeric methylation. Bisulfite conversion and sequencing analysis demonstrated demethylation of satellite 2 associated to 5-azaC exposure, principally after 72h of treatment. This change occurred in a non-specific pattern. Our study demonstrates an association between loss of satellite 2 DNA methylation and chromosome loss in human lymphocytes.  相似文献   

4.
The euchromatic regions of chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) genome share approximately 98% sequence similarity with the human (Homo sapiens), while the heterochromatic regions display considerable divergence. Positive heterochromatic regions revealed by the CBG-technique are confined to pericentromeric areas in humans, while in chimpanzees, these regions are pericentromeric, telomeric, and intercalary. When human chromosomes are digested with restriction endonuclease AluI and stained by Giemsa (AluI/Giemsa), positive heterochromatin is detected only in the pericentromeric regions, while in chimpanzee, telomeric, pericentromeric, and in some chromosomes both telomeric and centromeric, regions are positive. The DA/DAPI technique further revealed extensive cytochemical heterogeneity of heterochromatin in both species. Nevertheless, the fluorescence in situ hybridization technique (FISH) using a centromeric alpha satellite cocktail probe revealed that both primates share similar pericentromeric alpha satellite DNA sequences. Furthermore, cross-hybridization experiments using chromosomes of gorilla (Gorilla gorilla) and orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) suggest that the alphoid repeats of human and great apes are highly conserved, implying that these repeat families were present in their common ancestor. Nevertheless, the orangutan's chromosome 9 did not cross-hybridize with human probe. The euchromatic regions of chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) genome share approximately 98% sequence similarity with the human (Homo sapiens), while the heterochromatic regions display considerable divergence. Positive heterochromatic regions revealed by the CBG-technique are confined to pericentromeric areas in humans, while in chimpanzees, these regions are pericentromeric, telomeric, and intercalary. When human chromosomes are digested with restriction endonuclease AluI and stained by Giemsa (AluI/Giemsa), positive heterochromatin is detected only in the pericentromeric regions, while in chimpanzee, telomeric, pericentromeric, and in some chromosomes both telomeric and centromeric, regions are positive. The DA/DAPI technique further revealed extensive cytochemical heterogeneity of heterochromatin in both species. Nevertheless, the fluorescence in situ hybridization technique (FISH) using a centromeric alpha satellite cocktail probe revealed that both primates share similar pericentromeric alpha satellite DNA sequences. Furthermore, cross-hybridization experiments using chromosomes of gorilla (Gorilla gorilla) and orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) suggest that the alphoid repeats of human and great apes are highly conserved, implying that these repeat families were present in their common ancestor. Nevertheless, the orangutan's chromosome 9 did not cross-hybridize with human probe. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
We studied the organization of telomeric, major and minor satellite DNA sequences located in the pericentromeric regions of mouse telocentric and Robertsonian metacentric chromosomes by high-resolution fluorescence in situ hybridization. Molecular data have already proved that in telocentrics, from the physical chromosome end, telomeric sequences are followed by minor and then by major satellite DNA. We showed that the three families of repetitive DNA are organized as uninterrupted long-range cluster repeats and that there is no intermingling between telomeric and minor satellite DNA or between the major and the minor tandem repeats or with non-satellite DNA. The pericentromeric region of metacentric chromosomes consists of a small block of minor satellite DNA sandwiched between two blocks of major satellite DNA.  相似文献   

6.
Using human telomeric repeats and centromeric alpha repeats, we have identified adjacent single copy cosmid clones from human chromosome 22 cosmid libraries. These single copy cosmids were mapped to chromosome 22 by fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH). Based on these cosmids, we established contigs that included part of the telomeric and subtelomeric regions, and part of the centromeric and pericentromeric regions of the long arm of human chromosome 22. Each of the two cosmid contigs consisted of five consecutive steps and spanned approximately 100–150 kb at both extreme ends of 22q. Moreover, highly informative polymorphic markers were identified in the telomeric region. Our results suggest that the telomere specific repeat (TTAGGG) n encompasses a region that is larger than 40 kb. The cosmid contigs and restriction fragment length polymorphism markers described here are useful tools for physical and genetic mapping of chromosome 22, and constitute the basis of further studies of the structure of the subtelomeric and pericentromeric regions of 22q. We also demonstrate the use of these clones in clinical diagnosis of different chromosome 22 aberrations by FISH.  相似文献   

7.
A portion of an insertion sequence present in a member of the RIRE3 family of retrotransposons in Oryza sativa L. cv. IR36 was found to have an LTR sequence followed by a PBS sequence complementary to the 3'-end region of tRNAMet, indicative of another rice retrotransposon (named RIRE7). Cloning and sequencing of PCR-amplified fragments that made up all parts of the RIRE7 sequence showed that RIRE7 is a gypsy-type retrotransposon with partial homology in the pol region to the rice gypsy-type retrotransposons RIRE2 and RIRE3 identified in rice previously. Interestingly, various portions of the RIRE7 sequence were homologous to several DNA segments present in the centromere regions of cereal chromosomes. Further cloning and nucleotide sequencing of fragments flanking RIRE7 copies showed that RIRE7 was inserted into a site within a tandem repeat sequence that has a unit length of 155 bp. The tandem repeat sequence, named TrsD, was homologous to tandem repeat sequences RCS2 and CentC, previously identified in the centromeric regions of rice and maize chromosomes. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis of the metaphase chromosomes of O. sativa cv. Nipponbare showed that both RIRE7 and TrsD sequences were present in the centromere regions of the chromosomes. The presence of RIRE7 and the TrsD sequences in the centromere regions of several chromosomes was confirmed by the identification of several YAC clones whose chromosomal locations are known. Further FISH analysis of rice pachytene chromosomes showed that the TrsD sequences were located in a pericentromeric heterochromatin region. These findings strongly suggest that RIRE7 and TrsD are components of the pericentromeric heterochromatin of rice chromosomes.  相似文献   

8.
The genomic sequences derived from rice centromeric regions were analyzed to facilitate the comprehensive understanding of the rice genome. A rice centromere-specific satellite sequence, RCS2/TrsD/CentO, was used to screen P1-derived artificial chromosome (PAC) and bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) genomic libraries derived from Oryza sativa L. ssp. japonica cultivar Nipponbare. Physical maps of the centromeric regions were constructed by DNA fingerprinting methods and the aligned clones were analyzed by end sequencing. BLAST analysis revealed the composition of genes, centromeric satellites and other repetitive elements, such as RIRE7/CRR, RIRE8, Squiq, Anaconda, CACTA and miniature inverted-repeat transposable elements. Fiber-fluorescent in situ hybridization analysis also indicated the presence of distinct clusters of RCS2/TrsD/CentO satellite interspersed with other elements, instead of a long homogeneous region. Several expressed genes, sequences representative of ancestral organellar insertions, relatively long simple sequence repeats (SSRs), and sequences corresponding to 5S and 45S ribosomal RNA genes were also identified. Thirty-one gene sequences showed high-similarity to rice full-length cDNA sequences that had not been matched to the published rice genome sequence in silico. These results suggest the presence of expressed genes within and around the clusters of RCS2/TrsD/CentO satellites in unsequenced centromeric regions of the rice chromosomes.  相似文献   

9.
Three satellite DNA families are present in the pericentromeric region of chromosome 10; the alpha satellite and two 5 bp satellite families defined here as satellites 2 and 3. Pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) demonstrates that these sequences are organised into five discrete arrays which are linked within a region of approximately 5.3 Megabases (Mb) of DNA. The alpha satellite is largely confined to a 2.2 Mb array which is flanked on its p arm side by two 100-150 kb satellite 3 arrays and on its q arm side by a 900 kb satellite 2 array and a further 320 kb satellite 3 array. This linear order is corroborated by fluorescent in situ hybridisation analyses. In total, these arrays account for 3.6 Mb of DNA in the pericentromeric region of chromosome 10. These data provide both physical information on sequences which may be involved in centromere function and a map across the centromere which has the potential to link yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) contigs currently being developed on both arms of this chromosome.  相似文献   

10.
Danilova TV  Birchler JA 《Chromosoma》2008,117(4):345-356
To study the correlation of the sequence positions on the physical DNA finger print contig (FPC) map and cytogenetic maps of pachytene and somatic maize chromosomes, sequences located along the chromosome 9 FPC map approximately every 10 Mb were selected to place on maize chromosomes using fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH). The probes were produced as pooled polymerase chain reaction products based on sequences of genetic markers or repeat-free portions of mapped bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones. Fifteen probes were visualized on chromosome 9. The cytological positions of most sequences correspond on the pachytene, somatic, and FPC maps except some probes at the pericentromeric regions. Because of unequal condensation of mitotic metaphase chromosomes, being lower at pericentromeric regions and higher in the arms, probe positions are displaced to the distal ends of both arms. The axial resolution of FISH on somatic chromosome 9 varied from 3.3 to 8.2 Mb, which is 12-30 times lower than on pachytene chromosomes. The probe collection can be used as chromosomal landmarks or as a "banding paint" for the physical mapping of sequences including transgenes and BAC clones and for studying chromosomal rearrangements.  相似文献   

11.
The repetitive sequence PisTR-A has an unusual organization in the pea (Pisum sativum) genome, being present both as short dispersed repeats as well as long arrays of tandemly arranged satellite DNA. Cloning, sequencing and FISH analysis of both PisTR-A variants revealed that the former occurs in the genome embedded within the sequence of Ty3/gypsy-like Ogre elements, whereas the latter forms homogenized arrays of satellite repeats at several genomic loci. The Ogre elements carry the PisTR-A sequences in their 3′ untranslated region (UTR) separating the gag-pol region from the 3′ LTR. This region was found to be highly variable among pea Ogre elements, and includes a number of other tandem repeats along with or instead of PisTR-A. Bioinformatic analysis of LTR-retrotransposons mined from available plant genomic sequence data revealed that the frequent occurrence of variable tandem repeats within 3′ UTRs is a typical feature of the Tat lineage of plant retrotransposons. Comparison of these repeats to known plant satellite sequences uncovered two other instances of satellites with sequence similarity to a Tat-like retrotransposon 3′ UTR regions. These observations suggest that some retrotransposons may significantly contribute to satellite DNA evolution by generating a library of short repeat arrays that can subsequently be dispersed through the genome and eventually further amplified and homogenized into novel satellite repeats.  相似文献   

12.
FISH analysis of B chromosome repetitive DNA distribution in A and B chromosomes of two subspecies of Podisma sapporensis (P. s. sapporensis and P. s. krylonensis) was performed. In the B chromosomes, C-positive regions contained homologous DNA repeats present also in some C-positive A chromosome regions. Most C-negative regions contained DNA repeats characteristic of A chromosome euchromatic regions. The two subspecies analyzed differed in the location of A chromosome regions enriched with repeats homologous to repeats of B chromosomes. The only common region enriched with these B chromosome repeats in both subspecies was the X chromosome pericentromeric region. The origin of B chromosomes in P. sapporensis is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
S. Bonaccorsi  A. Lohe 《Genetics》1991,129(1):177-189
The entirely heterochromatic Y chromosome of Drosophila melanogaster contains a series of simple sequence satellite DNAs which together account for about 80% of its length. Molecular cloning of the three simple sequence satellite DNAs of D. melanogaster (1.672, 1.686 and 1.705 g/ml) revealed that each satellite comprises several distinct repeat sequences. Together 11 related sequences were identified and 9 of them were shown to be located on the Y chromosome. In the present study we have finely mapped 8 of these sequences along the Y by in situ hybridization on mitotic chromosome preparations. The hybridization experiments were performed on a series of cytologically determined rearrangements involving the Y chromosome. The breakpoints of these rearrangements provided an array of landmarks along the Y which have been used to localize each sequence on the various heterochromatic blocks defined by Hoechst and N-banding techniques. The results of this analysis indicate a good correlation between the N-banded regions and 1.705 repeats and between the Hoechst-bright regions and the 1.672 repeats. However, the molecular basis for banding does not appear to depend exclusively on DNA content, since heterochromatic blocks showing identical banding patterns often contain different combinations of satellite repeats. The distribution of satellite repeats has also been analyzed with respect to the male fertility factors of the Y chromosome. Both loop-forming (kl-5, kl-3 and ks-1) and non-loop-forming (kl-2 and ks-2) fertility genes contain substantial amounts of satellite DNAs. Moreover, each fertility region is characterized by a specific combination of satellite sequences rather than by an homogeneous array of a single type of repeat.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Human chromosome 9 is involved in a number of recurrent structural rearrangements; moreover, its pericentromeric region exhibits a remarkable evolutionary plasticity. In this study we present the molecular characterization of a constitutional rearrangement, involving the 9p21.1q13 region, which led to the formation of a supernumerary marker chromosome (SMC). We defined the sequence of the breakpoints and identified a new set of duplicons on human chromosome 9, named LCR9s (chromosome 9 low-copy repeats). Two of these duplicons were shown to be involved in a somatic exchange leading to the formation of the SMC. High-resolution FISH coupled to database search demonstrated that a total number of 35 LCR9 paralogs are present in the human genome. These newly described chromosome 9 duplicons have features that may be crucial in driving structural chromosome rearrangements in germinal and somatic cells.  相似文献   

15.
Composition and structure of the centromeric region of rice chromosome 8   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23  
Understanding the organization of eukaryotic centromeres has both fundamental and applied importance because of their roles in chromosome segregation, karyotypic stability, and artificial chromosome-based cloning and expression vectors. Using clone-by-clone sequencing methodology, we obtained the complete genomic sequence of the centromeric region of rice (Oryza sativa) chromosome 8. Analysis of 1.97 Mb of contiguous nucleotide sequence revealed three large clusters of CentO satellite repeats (68.5 kb of 155-bp repeats) and >220 transposable element (TE)-related sequences; together, these account for approximately 60% of this centromeric region. The 155-bp repeats were tandemly arrayed head to tail within the clusters, which had different orientations and were interrupted by TE-related sequences. The individual 155-bp CentO satellite repeats showed frequent transitions and transversions at eight nucleotide positions. The 40 TE elements with highly conserved sequences were mostly gypsy-type retrotransposons. Furthermore, 48 genes, showing high BLAST homology to known proteins or to rice full-length cDNAs, were predicted within the region; some were close to the CentO clusters. We then performed a genome-wide survey of the sequences and organization of CentO and RIRE7 families. Our study provides the complete sequence of a centromeric region from either plants or animals and likely will provide insight into the evolutionary and functional analysis of plant centromeres.  相似文献   

16.
In situ digestion with the restriction endonuclease (RE) Sau3A (Sau3A REISD) uncovers a polymorphism for the pericentromeric heterochromatin of human chromosome 3, which can be positively stained (3+) or not (3-), and has proven useful to differentiate donor and recipient cells after sex-matched bone marrow transplantation and to analyze the so-called hemopoietic chimerism. The aim of the present investigation was to obtain insight into the molecular basis of such polymorphism to optimize its use for chimerism quantification using methodological approaches other than REISD. To this end, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) assays using probes for the satellite DNA sequences that mainly constitute chromosome 3 pericentromeric heterochromatin (alpha-satellite and satellite 1 DNA) were performed on control and Sau3A-digested chromosomes. The results obtained suggest that chromosome 3 alpha-satellite DNA is digested in all individuals studied, irrespective of the karyotype obtained by Sau3A REISD (3++, 3+-, 3--), and thus it does not seem to be involved in the polymorphism uncovered by Sau3A on this chromosome. Satellite 1 DNA is not digested in any case, and shows a polymorphism for its domain size, which correlates with the polymorphism uncovered by Sau3A in such a way that 3+ chromosomes show a large domain (3L) and 3- chromosomes show a small domain (3S). It seems, therefore, that the cause of the polymorphism uncovered by Sau3A on the pericentromeric region of chromosome 3 is a difference in the size of the satellite 1 DNA domain. Small satellite 1 DNA domains fall under the resolution level of REISD technique and are identified as 3-.  相似文献   

17.
BAC2, a rice BAC clone containing (TTTAGGG)n homologous sequences, was analyzed by Southern hybridization and DNA sequencing of its subclones. It was disclosed that there were many tandem repeated satellite DNA sequences, called TA352, as well as simple tandem repeats consisting of TTTAGGG or its variant within the BAC2 insert. A 0. 8 kb (TTTAGGG) n-containing fragment in BAC2 was mapped in the telomere regions of at least 5 pairs of rice chromosomes by using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). By RFLP analysis of low copy sequences the BAC2 clone was localized in one terminal region of chromosome 6. All the results strongly suggest that the telomeric DNA sequences of rice are TTTAGGG or its variant, and the linked satellite DNA TA352 sequences belong to telomere-associated sequences.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The analysis of major satellite sequence differences between Mus spretus and laboratory mice provides a robust method for analyzing the centromere location for the genetic maps of each mouse chromosome. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) of a genomic probe, pMR196, for the laboratory mouse major satellite sequences was used to identify C57BL/6Ros (B6) pericentromeric heterochromatin in progeny of reciprocal backcross matings. These included 80 (B6xM. spretus)F1xM. spretus progeny (BSS) and 70 (B6xM. spretus)F1xB6 (BSB) progeny. FISH analysis of pericentromeric heterochromatin was conducted on the same metaphase spreads that were karyotypically analyzed for chromosomespecific banding patterns. Analysis of chromosomal segregation suggested that there was not primary deviation from random assortment during meiosis in the interspecific hybrid female, because nearly all of the 190 pair-wise comparisons did not deviate from expected and because there was no consistent pattern of deviation of the same chromosomes in the reciprocal backcross progeny from similar (C57BL/6xM. spretus)F1 hybrid females. These results affirm the value of using the major satellite to genetically mark pericentromeric heterochromatin in the analysis of the segregation and assortment of centromeres in Mus interspecific crosses.  相似文献   

20.
The pericentromeric region of the human X chromosome is characterized by a tandemly repeated family of 2.0 kilobasepair (kb) DNA fragments, initially revealed by cleavage of human DNA with the restriction enzyme BamHI. We report here the complete nucleotide sequence of a cloned member of the repeat family and establish that this X-linked DNA family consists entirely of alpha satellite DNA. Our data indicate that the 2.0 kb repeat consists of twelve alpha satellite monomers arranged in imperfect, direct repeats. Each of the alpha X monomers is approximately 171 basepairs (bp) in length and is 60-75% identical in sequence to previously described primate alpha satellite DNAs. The twelve alpha X monomers are 65-85% identical in sequence to each other and are organized as two adjacent, related blocks of five monomers, plus an additional two monomers also related to monomers within the pentamer blocks. Partial nucleotide sequence of a second, independent copy of the 2.0 kb BamHI fragment established that the 2.0 kb repeat is, in fact, the unit of amplification on the X. Comparison of the sequences of the twelve alpha X monomers allowed derivation of a 171 bp consensus sequence for alpha satellite DNA on the human X chromosome. These sequence data, combined with the results of filter hybridization experiments of total human DNA and X chromosome DNA, using subregions within the 2.0 kb repeat as probes, provide strong support for the hypothesis that individual human chromosomes are characterized by different alpha satellite families, defined both by restriction enzyme periodicity and by chromosome-specific primary sequence.  相似文献   

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