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DNA in the macronucleus of Stylonychia mytilus exists as discrete gene-sized fragments which are derived from micronuclear DNA through a series of well-defined developmental events. It has been proposed that each of the DNA fragments might represent a gene and its controlling elements. We have investigated this possibility using genes which code for the five histone proteins. Macronuclear DNA fragments were fractionated according to size by agarose gel electrophoresis, the fragments transferred to nitrocellulose filters using the technique of Southern, and the filter-bound DNA hybridized with labeled cloned histone genes of the sea urchin, Psammechinus miliaris. Results indicate, first, that sequences homologous to the five individual histone gene probes are present in discrete macronuclear fragments which appear as bands in the gel hybridization assay. Secondly, for each of the five individual histone gene probes the homologous DNA fragments are several in number, ranging in size from 7.6 Kb (Kilo base pairs) to 0.73 Kb. For example, the largest of six detected fragments hybridizing to the H3 gene probe contains approximately 10 times the amount of DNA required to code for a Stylonychia H3 histone. The smallest detected fragment hybridizing to the H3 probe contains enough DNA to code for approximately two copies of the histone. Finally, in general, no two histone gene probes hybridized to the same macronuclear DNA fragment. This result indicates that genes coding for the five histones in Stylonychia are not located together on the same macronuclear DNA fragments and implies that the five functionally related genes would not be transcribed together as a polycistronic unit.  相似文献   

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Sea urchin (S. purpuratus) histone DNA of constructed plasmid chimeras cloned in E. coli was cleaved with the restriction endonucleases Eco RI, Hind III, Sal I, Bam I, and Hha I. The resulting fragments were ordered and isolated directly from agarose gels or cloned into other plasmids. Each fragment hybridized to one or another of the five histone mRNAs and elucidated the order of the histone genes in each of the cloned fragments. Some DNA did not hybridize to histone mRNAs and was identified as spacer DNA located between coding regions.Total sea urchin DNA was cleaved with restriction endonucleases, fractionated on agarose gels, and hybridized to histone mRNAs or histone DNA. The results revealed the order of the five histone genes in the histone gene repeat unit and demonstrate that the histone spacer DNAs have little sequence homology to other genes. Exonuclease III digestion of specific linear chimeric histone DNA plasmids followed by hybridization with mRNAs demonstrated the existence of all five histone genes on one strand of DNA and the 5′-3′ polarity of that strand. These results, in conjunction with the data of Wu et al. (1976), allow us to construct a map of coding and spacer sequences in the transcribed strand of the S. purpuratus histone gene repeat unit:
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R H Cohn  L H Kedes 《Cell》1979,18(3):855-864
The linear arrangement and lengths of the spacers and coding regions in the two nonallelic histone gene variant clusters of L. pictus are remarkably homologous by R loop analysis and are similar in general topography to the histone gene repeat units of other sea urchins examined to date. No interventing sequences were detected. The coding regions of these two histone gene variants share considerable sequence homology; however, there are areas of nonhomology in every spacer region and the lengths of the nonhomologous spacers between the H2A and H1 genes are not the same for the two repeat unit classes (inter-gene heterogeneity). Combining length measurements obtained with both R loops and heteroduplexes suggests that the DNA sequences of the analogous leader regions for the two H1 mRNAs are nonhomologous. Similar observations were made for the H4 leader sequences, as well as the trailer region on H2B. S. purpuratus spacer DNA segments share little sequence homology with L. pictus; however, the analgous coding (and possibly flanking) regions have conserved their sequences. The various coding and spacer regions within a repeat unit do not share DNA sequences. Thus certain areas in the sea urchin histone gene repeat units have been highly conserved during evolution, while other areas have been allowed to undergo considerable sequence change not only between species but within a species.  相似文献   

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The genes coding for the H3 and H4 histones of Saccharomyces cerevisiae have been isolated by recombinant DNA cloning. The genes were detected in a bacteriophage lambda library of the yeast genome by hybridization with plasmids containing the cloned Psammechinus miliaris sea urchin histone genes (pCH7) and the cloned Drosophila histone genes (cDM500). Two non-allelic sets of the H3 and H4 genes have been isolated. Each set consists of one H3 gene and one H4 gene arranged as a divergently transcribed pair separated by an intergene spacer DNA. The histone genes were located on the cloned yeast fragments by S1 nuclease mapping, as was a gene (SMT1) of unknown function that does not code for a histone but is closely linked to one of the histone sets. Sequence homology between the two non-allelic sets is confined to the coding regions of the respective genes while the flanking DNA and intergene spacer DNA are extensively divergent. Cellular RNA homologous to the histone genes, including transcribed non-coding sequences unique to each of the four genes, was detected by S1 mapping, thus demonstrating that all four genes are transcribed in vegetative cells.  相似文献   

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We isolated five different phage clones containing histone gene clusters with up to five H1 genes per phage clone from a Mytilus edulis genomic library. Among these H1 genes, nine gene types coding for five different H1 proteins have been identified. All H1 histone genes were located on repetitive restriction fragments with only slightly different sizes. The H1 coding regions show highly related sequences, suggesting that the multitude of H1 genes has evolved by gene duplication events. Core histone genes could not be found on these five Mytilus edulis genome fragments. Received: 28 July 1998 / Accepted: 17 May 1999  相似文献   

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The relative positions of the sea urchin histone genes and the spacer regions on the chimeric plasmids pSp2 and pSp17 have been mapped by hybridizing total histone messenger RNA to single strands of the plasmid DNAs. The lengths and spacing between the several RNA:DNA duplex regions on the single strands of DNA were measured by the gene 32-ethidium bromide electron microscope mapping method. We find that the genes are interdigitated with spacer sequences of different lengths; that there are three coding sequences on pSp2, all on the same strand, with the relative order H1, H4, and B4; and that there are two coding sequences on pSp17, both on the same strand, corresponding to the messages denoted B1 and B2–B3, where B4, B1, and B2–3 are electrophoretically resolved components of histone mRNA, all of size intermediate between the larger H1 and the smaller H4 message.  相似文献   

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Isolation of yeast histone genes H2A and H2B   总被引:71,自引:0,他引:71  
L Hereford  K Fahrner  J Woolford  M Rosbash  D B Kaback 《Cell》1979,18(4):1261-1271
Analysis of cloned sequences for yeast histone genes H2A and H2B reveals that there are only two copies of this pair of genes within the haploid yeast genome. Within each copy, the genes for H2A and H2B are separated by approximately 700 bp of spacer DNA. The two copies are separated from one another in the yeast genome by a minimum distance of 35-60 kb. Sequence homology between the two copies is restricted to the genes for H2A and H2B; the spacer DNA between the genes is nonhomologous. In both copies, the genes for H2A and H2B are divergently transcribed. In addition, both plasmids code for other nonhistone proteins. Sequences coding for histones H3 and H4 have not been detected in the immediate vicinity of the genes for H2A and H2B.  相似文献   

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We have determined the nucleotide sequence of sea urchin (Lytechinus pictus) late stage H3 and H4 histone genes contained on the clone pLpH3H4 -21 and of the early stage H3 gene contained on the plasmid pLpA . Comparison of these differentially regulated histone genes with each other and with other L. pictus late and early stage histone H3 and H4 genes previously sequenced confirms that members of each histone gene family (early and late) are more homologous to each other than they are to members of other histone gene families. The spacer regions between two late H3-H4 gene pairs on the clones pLpH3H4 -19 and pLpH3H4 -21 have diverged to the point where they are no longer homologous. However, comparative analysis of the 5' flanking DNA has identified a sequence 5'C-T-C-A-T-G-T-A-T-T3' upstream of both late H4 genes and another, 5'A-G-A-T-T-C-A3', upstream of both H3 genes. Except for a short conserved sequence near the initiation codon, the transcribed 5' leaders of the late mRNAs differ in length and sequence in the two non-allelic late histone gene pairs. This divergence contrasts with the 95 to 96% conservation found between late histone gene coding sequences. The results suggest that there is intergenic exchange in the germline among members of the late histone gene family and that the unit of exchange is the individual gene rather than the heterotypic dimer which includes the common spacer DNA.  相似文献   

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The accumulation of messenger RNA coding for histone H3 in oogenesis of Xenopus laevis was studied by quantitative hybridization techniques, using a cloned genomic DNA fragment as a probe. This probe was isolated from cloned Xenopus histone DNA and contains most of the H3 coding sequences. Histone H3 mRNA accumulation was found to be completed before the maximum lampbrush stage. Hybridization of RNA blots with DNA probes containing genes for histones H2A, H2B, and H4 suggests the same accumulation pattern for the mRNAs coding for these histones as for histone H3 mRNA. The amount of H3 mRNA in the mature oocyte was established to be 130 ± 68 pg, i.e., about 5 × 108 copies.  相似文献   

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《Gene》1997,189(1):127-134
We have analyzed the promoter and the coding sequences of the two homologous histone H1°-encoding genes from Xenopus laevis, here termed H1°-1 and H1°-2. Both genes encode proteins of 193 amino acids and differ at just 16 amino-acid residues. Putative regulatory sequences identified in the promoter region are the same and are highly conserved. However, significant differences exist in the 5′ untranslated regions (UTR) of the transcribed sequences of these two genes, such as several deletions in the 5′-UTR of the H1°-2 gene in comparison with the H1°-1 gene 5′-UTR. The 3′-UTR is a short sequence of about 200 bp which is unexpected compared with the long 3′-UTR of mammalian H1° mRNA, but it is in the same size range as in avian H5 mRNA. Thus, the main differences between these two genes are observed in sequences potentially involved in the regulation of the H1° gene expression such as the 5′-UTR. The two genes are expressed during embryogenesis and in several adult tissues. We discuss these findings in terms of the evolution of histone H1° genes in vertebrates and the appearance of histone H5 in avian species.© 1997 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.  相似文献   

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Simplified DNA sequence acquisition has provided many new data sets that are useful for phylogenetic reconstruction, including single- and multiple-copy nuclear and organellar genes. Although transcribed regions receive much attention, nontranscribed regions have recently been added to the repertoire of sequences suitable for phylogenetic studies, especially for closely related taxa. We evaluated the efficacy of a small portion of the histone repeat for phylogenetic reconstruction among Drosophila species. Histone repeats in invertebrates offer distinct advantages similar to those of widely used ribosomal repeats. First, the units are tandemly repeated and undergo concerted evolution. Second, histone repeats include both highly conserved coding and variable intergenic regions. This composition facilitates application of "universal" primers spanning potentially informative sites. We examined a small region of the histone repeat, including the intergenic spacer segments of coding regions from the divergently transcribed H2A and H2B histone genes. The spacer (about 230 bp) exists as a mosaic with highly conserved functional motifs interspersed with rapidly diverging regions; the former aid in alignment of the spacer. There are no ambiguities in alignment of coding regions. Coding and noncoding regions were analyzed together and separately for phylogenetic information. Parsimony, distance, and maximum-likelihood methods successfully retrieve the corroborated phylogeny for the taxa examined. This study demonstrates the resolving power of a small histone region which may now be added to the growing collection of phylogenetically useful DNA sequences.  相似文献   

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We designed and synthesized conjugates between pyrrole–imidazole polyamides and seco-CBI that alkylate within the coding regions of the histone H4 genes. DNA alkylating activity on the histone H4 fragment and cellular effects against K562 chronic myelogenous leukemia cells were investigated. One of the conjugates, 5-CBI, showed strong DNA alkylation activity and good sequence specificity on a histone H4 gene fragment. K562 cells treated with 5-CBI down-regulated the histone H4 gene and induced apoptosis efficiently. Global gene expression data revealed that a number of histone H4 genes were down-regulated by 5-CBI treatment. These results suggest that sequence-specific DNA alkylating agents may have the potential of targeting specific genes for cancer chemotherapy.  相似文献   

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Summary The organization of histone gene clusters of the duckCairina moschata was studied in the DNA inserts of two recombinant phage that overlap and feature identical histone gene arrangements but differ in sequence details and in the extent of repetition of an AT-rich motif in one of the nontranscribed spacer regions. These few but substantial differences between otherwise nearly identical histone gene groups suggest that we have independently isolated alleles of the same site of the duck genome or that this gene arrangement occurs (with slight variations) more than once per haploid genome. Within the histone gene cluster described, H3 and H4 genes are duplicated (with inverted orientation), whereas one H1 gene is flanked by single H2A and H2B genes. The arrangement of duck histone genes described here is identical to a subsection of the chicken genome but differs from any other published histone gene cluster.  相似文献   

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