首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 234 毫秒
1.
A satellite DNA with a buoyant density equal to that of main band DNA in neutral cesium chloride (‘cryptic satellite’) can be isolated from the DNA of mustard (Sinapis alba) nuclei by Ag+/Cs2SO4 density gradient centrifugation. This satellite is cleaved into 172 bp repeat units by HinfI, AluI or HaeIII. The HinfI fragments have been further cleaved by AluI, and seven AluI subfragments have been sequenced. As a result two versions of a basic 172 HinfI repeat have been found, one (A + B) with an additional HinfI site. These two sequences (A + B and C) are the most frequent versions of the basic repeat of mustard satellite DNA. The basic 172 bp unit does not contain subrepeats or palindromic sequences. It is not similar (at a criterion of 15 common bases) with any known satellite sequence. It is not unusually highly methylated in the native state.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Optimum conditions have been established for isolation of ‘cryptic’ satellite DNA from the genome of pea (Pisum sativum), using gradients of CS2SO4 containing silver ions. At an Ag+ :DNA-P ratio (R) of 0.1, and at alkaline pH, four fractions are obtained: mainband (buoyant density 1.437 g cm3; 67% of total DNA), satellite I (buoyant density 1.582 g/cm3; 7% of total DNA), satellite II (buoyant density 1.520 g/cm3, 11% of total) and satellite III (buoyant density variable between 1.45 and 1.51 g/cm3; 15% of total). The reiterated DNA content of these four fractions has been investigated by reassociation experiments conducted over a Cot range of 1 × 10?5 to 2.0. All four fractions contain at least two kinetic components; each fraction, including the mainband, consists at least partly of highly reiterated DNA. Ribosomal RNA hybridizes only to the mainband.  相似文献   

4.
《Gene》1996,169(2):157-164
A highly repetitive sequence in the genomic DNA of the bivalve mollusc Donax trunculus (Dt) has been identified upon restriction with EcoRV. During the time-course of DNA digestion, genomic fragments resolved electrophoretically into a ladder-like banding pattern revealing a tandem arrangement of the repeated elements, thus representing satellite DNA sequences. Cloning and sequence analysis unraveled the presence of two groups of monomer units which can be considered distinctive satellite subfamilies. Each subclass is distinguishable by the presence of 17 evenly spread diagnostic nucleotides (nt). The respective consensus sequences are 155 bp in length and differ by 11%, while relevant internal substructures were not observed. The two satellite subfamilies constitute 0.23 and 0.09% of the Dt genome, corresponding to 20 000 and 7600 copies per haploid complement, respectively. Sequence mutations often appear to be shared between two or more monomer variants, indicating a high degree of homogenization as opposed to that of random mutational events. Shared mutations among variants appear either as single changes or in long stretches. This pattern may arise from gene conversion mechanisms acting at different levels, such as the spread of nt sequences of a similar length to the monomer repeat itself, and the diffusion of short tracts a few bp long. Subfamilies might have evolved from the occasional amplification and spreading of a monomer variant effected by gene conversion events  相似文献   

5.
The proliferation disrupter (prod) gene of Drosophila melanogaster encodes a novel protein associated with centromeric chromosomal regions that is required for chromatin condensation and cell viability. We have examined the binding of the Prod protein to DNA in vitro. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrate that Prod is a DNA-binding protein that specifically recognizes the 10 bp AGAATAACAT satellite repeat of D.melanogaster. Footprinting experiments show that the protein interacts with a 5–8 bp target sequence in each 10 bp repeat and suggest that it can mediate condensation of this satellite into a superhelix. Gel retardation experiments indicate that Prod does not have a well defined DNA-binding domain and it binds the satellite in a co-operative manner, probably forming Prod multimers. Since Prod localizes to both heterochromatin and euchromatin in vivo, we discuss the possibility that the ability of pre-existing euchromatic proteins to bind DNA in a co-operative manner, might be a prerequisite of satellite compaction and satellite amplification, thereby providing a basic factor in heterochromatin evolution.  相似文献   

6.
Ten per cent of mouse DNA occurs as a satellite band with a buoyant density lighter than that of the main band1. This satellite contains highly repetitious DNA2,3. It has been shown that the amount of satellite is markedly increased in DNA isolated from the heterochromatin fraction of mouse nuclei4. Furthermore, in situ hybridization studies have shown that satellite DNA is localized to the pericentromeric heterochromatin of all the mouse chromosomes except the Y5,6. These observations demonstrate an intimate association between mouse satellite DNA and heterochromatin and they raise the question: is all the DNA from mouse heterochromatin composed of satellite DNA or is a significant portion composed of non-satellite DNA?  相似文献   

7.
We have determined the complete nucleotide sequence of the monomer repeating unit of the 1.688 g/cm3 satellite DNA from Drosophila melanogaster. This satellite DNA, which makes up 4% of the Drosophila genome and is located primarily on the sex chromosomes, has a repeat unit 359 base-pairs in length. This complex sequence is unrelated to the other three major satellite DNAs present in this species, each of which contains a very short repeated sequence only 5 to 10 base-pairs long. The repeated sequence is more similar to the complex repeating units found in satellites of mammalian origin in that it contains runs of adenylate and thymidylate residues. We have determined the nature of the sequence variations in this DNA by restriction nuclease cleavage and by direct sequence determination of (1) individual monomer units cloned in hybrid plasmids, (2) mixtures of adjacent monomers from a cloned segment of this satellite DNA, (3) mixtures of monomer units isolated by restriction nuclease cleavage of total 1.688 g/cm3 satellite DNA. Both direct sequence determination and restriction nuclease cleavage indicate that certain positions in the repeat can be highly variable with up to 50% of certain restriction sites having altered recognition sequences. Despite the high degree of variation at certain sites, most positions in the sequence are highly conserved. Sequence analysis of a mixture of 15 adjacent monomer units detected only nine variable positions out of 359 base-pairs. Total satellite DNA showed only four additional positions. While some variability would have been missed due to the sequencing methods used, we conclude that the variation from one repeat to the next is not random and that most of the satellite repeat is conserved. This conservation may reflect functional aspects of the repeated DNA, since we have shown earlier that part of this sequence serves as a binding site for a sequence-specific DNA binding protein isolated from Drosophila embryos (Hsieh &; Brutlag, 1979).  相似文献   

8.
The DNA recombination and repair machinery of Mycoplasma pneumoniae is composed of a limited set of approximately 11 proteins. Two of these proteins were predicted to be encoded by neighboring open reading frames (ORFs) MPN340 and MPN341. Both ORFs were found to have sequence similarity with genes that encode proteins belonging to the DNA helicase superfamily 1 (SF1). Interestingly, while a homolog of the MPN341 ORF is present in the genome of Mycoplasma genitalium (ORF MG244), MPN340 is an M. pneumoniae-specific ORF that is not found in other mycoplasmas. Moreover, the length of MPN340 (1590 base pairs [bp]) is considerably shorter than that of MPN341 (2148 bp). Examination of the MPN340-encoded amino acid sequence indicated that it may lack a so-called 2B subdomain, which is found in most SF1 DNA helicases. Also, the MPN340-encoded amino acid sequence was found to differ between subtype 1 strain M129 and subtype 2 strain FH at three amino acid positions. Both protein variants, which were termed PcrAs M129 and PcrAs FH, respectively, as well as the MPN341- and MG244-encoded proteins (PcrAMpn and PcrAMge, respectively), were purified, and tested for their ability to interact with DNA. While PcrAMpn and PcrAMge were found to bind preferentially to single-stranded DNA, both PcrAs M129 and PcrAs FH did not demonstrate significant DNA binding. However, all four proteins were found to have divalent cation- and ATP-dependent DNA helicase activity. The proteins displayed highest activity on partially double-stranded DNA substrates carrying 3′ single-stranded extensions.  相似文献   

9.
Escherichiacoli RecBCD is a bipolar DNA helicase possessing two motor subunits (RecB, a 3′-to-5′ translocase, and RecD, a 5′-to-3′ translocase) that is involved in the major pathway of recombinational repair. Previous studies indicated that the minimal kinetic mechanism needed to describe the ATP-dependent unwinding of blunt-ended DNA by RecBCD in vitro is a sequential n-step mechanism with two to three additional kinetic steps prior to initiating DNA unwinding. Since RecBCD can “melt out” ∼ 6 bp upon binding to the end of a blunt-ended DNA duplex in a Mg2+-dependent but ATP-independent reaction, we investigated the effects of noncomplementary single-stranded (ss) DNA tails [3′-(dT)6 and 5′-(dT)6 or 5′-(dT)10] on the mechanism of RecBCD and RecBC unwinding of duplex DNA using rapid kinetic methods. As with blunt-ended DNA, RecBCD unwinding of DNA possessing 3′-(dT)6 and 5′-(dT)6 noncomplementary ssDNA tails is well described by a sequential n-step mechanism with the same unwinding rate (mkU = 774 ± 16 bp s− 1) and kinetic step size (m = 3.3 ± 1.3 bp), yet two to three additional kinetic steps are still required prior to initiation of DNA unwinding (kC = 45 ± 2 s− 1). However, when the noncomplementary 5′ ssDNA tail is extended to 10 nt [5′-(dT)10 and 3′-(dT)6], the DNA end structure for which RecBCD displays optimal binding affinity, the additional kinetic steps are no longer needed, although a slightly slower unwinding rate (mkU = 538 ± 24 bp s− 1) is observed with a similar kinetic step size (m = 3.9 ± 0.5 bp). The RecBC DNA helicase (without the RecD subunit) does not initiate unwinding efficiently from a blunt DNA end. However, RecBC does initiate well from a DNA end possessing noncomplementary twin 5′-(dT)6 and 3′-(dT)6 tails, and unwinding can be described by a simple uniform n-step sequential scheme, without the need for the additional kC initiation steps, with a similar kinetic step size (m = 4.4 ± 1.7 bp) and unwinding rate (mkobs = 396 ± 15 bp s− 1). These results suggest that the additional kinetic steps with rate constant kC required for RecBCD to initiate unwinding of blunt-ended and twin (dT)6-tailed DNA reflect processes needed to engage the RecD motor with the 5′ ssDNA.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The taxonomic relationships among perennial oats (Helictotrichon Besser ex Schultes & Schultes, Aveninae, Aveneae, Poaceae) have been studied using highly repeated satellite DNA as a molecular marker. Highly repetitive sequences were isolated from restriction endonuclease digests of nuclear DNA of Helictotrichon convolutum, and satellite repeats (approximately 365 bp in length) were cloned, sequenced and compared among each other. They exhibited an intraspecific sequence variability of 6–9%. This satellite DNA, CON1, is differentially distributed within the genus Helictotrichon. In species of the subgenus Helictotrichon a high copy number is detectable, whereas in representatives of the subgenera Pratavenastrum and Pubavenastrum the number of copies per genome is rather low. Surprisingly, the satellite DNA repeat CON1 shows 74% sequence similarity to an A-genome specific repetitive DNA of Oryza (rice).  相似文献   

12.
13.
14.
A new approach has been used to examine DNA sequence organization in the chicken genome. The interspersion pattern was determined by studying the fraction of labelled DNA fragments of different lengths that hybridized to an excess of short chicken repeated DNA sequences. The results indicate that chicken DNA has a pattern of sequence organization quite different than the standard ‘Xenopus’ or ‘Drosophila’ patterns. Two classes of unique sequences are found. One, 34% of the genome, consists of unique sequences approx. 4 kb long interspersed with repeated sequences. The second, non-interspersed fraction, 38% of the genome, consists of unique sequences found in long tracts, a minimum of approx. 22 kb in length. In an attempt to determine whether a relationship exists between DNA sequence organization and the distribution of structural genes we have isolated chicken DNA sequences belonging to different interspersion classes and tested each for the presence of structural genes by hybridization to excess poly(A)+ mRNA. Sequences complementary to poly(A)+ mRNA can be found with approximately the same frequency in both the non-interspersed fraction of the genome and a repeat-contiguous fraction enriched for interspersed sequences.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The gene encoding the tRNA UAA Leu from broad bean chloroplasts has been located on a 5.1 kbp long BamHI fragment by analysis of the DNA sequence of an XbaI subfragment. This gene is 536 bp long and is split in the anticodon region. The 451 bp long intron shows high sequence homology over about 100 bp from each end with the corresponding regions of the maize chloroplast tRNA UAA Leu intron. These conserved sequences are probably involved in the splicing reaction, for they can be folded into a secondary structure which is very similar to the postulated structure of the intron from the autosplicable ribosomal RNA precursor of Tetrahymena. Very little sequence conservation is found in the 5-and 3-flanking regions of the broad bean and maize chloroplast tRNA UAA Leu genes.  相似文献   

16.
Summary We have examined the organization of tRNATyr genes in three ecotypes of Arabidopsis thaliana, a plant with an extremely small genome of 7 × 107 bp. Three tRNATyr gene-containing EcoRI fragments of 1.5 kb and four fragments of 0.6, 1.7, 2.5 and 3.7 kb were cloned from A. thaliana cv. Columbia (Col-O) DNA and sequenced. All EcoRl fragments except those of 0.6 and 2.5 kb comprise an identical arrangement of two tRNATyr genes flanked by a tRNASer gene. The three tRNA genes have the same polarity and are separated by 250 and 370 bp, respectively. The tRNATyr genes encode the known cytoplasmic tRNAGA Tyr. Both genes contain a 12 by long intervening sequence. Densitometric evaluation of the genomic blot reveals the presence of at least 20 copies, including a few multimers, of the 1.5 kb fragment in Col-O DNA, indicating a multiple amplification of this unit. Southern blots of EcoRl-digested DNA from the other two ecotypes, cv. Landsberg (La-O) and cv. Niederzenz (Nd-O) also show 1.5 kb units as the major hybridizing bands. Several lines of evidence support the idea of a strict tandem arrangement of this 1.5 kb unit: (i) Sequence analysis of the EcoRI inserts of 2.5 and 0.6 kb reveals the loss of an EcoRI site between 1.5 kb units and the introduction of a new EcoRI site in a 1.5 kb dimer. (ii) Complete digestion of Col-O DNA with restriction enzymes which cleave only once within the 1.5 kb unit also produces predominantly 1.5 kb fragments. (iii) Partial digestion with EcoRI shows that the 1.5 kb fragments indeed arise from the regular spacing of the restriction sites. The high degree of sequence homology among the 1.5 kb units, ranging from 92% to 99%, suggests that the tRNASer/tRNATyr cluster evolved 1–5 million years ago, after the Brassicaceae diverged from the other flowering plants about 5–10 million years ago.  相似文献   

17.
The 1.688 g/cm3 satellite DNA of Drosophila melanogaster is composed primarily of 359 base-pair units repeated in tandem. Most of these units contain a single cleavage site for both HaeIII and HinfI restriction endonucleases; however, some units lack one or both sites. Previously we had shown that the distribution of HaeIII and HinfI endonuclease sites varies widely between different regions of 1.688 g/cm3 satellite DNA; for example, some regions contain HaeIII sites in every unit and other regions (>10,000 base-pairs) contain no HaeIII sites (Carlson &; Brutlag, 1977). We have now cloned molecules of 1.688 g/cm3 satellite DNA which lack HaeIII sites and have shown that the absence of sites is caused by sequence variation rather than base modification. This result indicates that regions of 1.688 g/cm3 satellite DNA with different distributions of restriction sites differ in the sequence of their repeating units. We also show that a large fraction of the satellite DNA which is not cleaved by HaeIII endonuclease still contains HinfI endonuclease sites (and AluI sites) spaced about 359 base-pairs apart. However, one cloned segment lacking HaeIII sites was found to contain 33 tandem copies of a novel 254 base-pair unit. Sequence analysis showed that this 254 base-pair unit is homologous to the 359 repeat except for a 98 base-pair deletion. These data suggest that both units have evolved from a common ancestor and that each has subsequently become amplified into separate tandem arrays.  相似文献   

18.
Copies of two repetitive elements of the common tree shrew (Tupaia glis) genome were cloned and sequenced. The first element, Tu III, is a ~260 bp long short interspersed element (SINE) with the 5′ end derived from glycine RNA. Tu III carries long polypurine-and polypyrimidine-rich tracts, which may contribute to the specific secondary structure of Tu III RNA. This SINE was also found in the genome of the smooth-tailed tree shrew of another genus (Dendrogale). Tu III appears to be confined to the order Scandentia since it was not found in the DNA of other tested mammals. The second element, Tu-SAT1, is a tandem repeat with a monomer length of 365 bp. Some properties of its nucleotide sequence suggest that Tu-SAT1 is a centromeric satellite.  相似文献   

19.
The satellite bands of the DNA of Drosophila virilis   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
Purified DNA has been prepared from Drosophila virilis using a modification of the method derived for bacteria (Marmur, 1961). Some physical properties have been examined, a new hidden satellite discovered, and a difference found in the satellite banding pattern of different tissues. — In addition to the three satellite bands lighter than the main band previously reported (Gall et al., 1970), a new satellite heavier than the main band has been detected after thermal denaturation of the DNA (which substantially shifts the buoyant density of the main band but not that of the satellites indicating that all are fast-annealing). The satellite pattern of DNA extracted from heads alone differed from that of the entire animals: the amount of satellite I was decreased and II increased; III was unaffected; IV was increased relative to the amount in the main band. The total content of satellite material in the heads (assumed to be entirely diploid) was 42%, the highest amount reported for any organism. — Thermal transitions were determined for the DNA from adults and larvae. After preparative CsCl density gradient fractionation of adult DNA, two sets of bimodal thermal curves were obtained (in SSC) with agreement between the initial position in the preparative gradient, the thermal transitions, and the G+C content from density except for satellite III for which the Tm gave a more accurate G+C amount. DNA from satellites I and II together generated a Tm of 81.2° which was similar to a calculated Tm of 81.9° making the naive assumption that the thermal components of the two satellites would interact in a simple additive fashion. A Tm of 71.9° was ascribed to satellite III which indicates that it is not the equivalent of the poly (A-T) band found at the same density in D. melanogaster (Fansler et al., 1970). The calculated overall base composition from the density equivalents (using the value for satellite III from thermal data) gave an expected G+C content of 36.6%. The measured value was 36.0%. The possible significance of the differential satellite pattern has been discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Nucleosomes and subnucleosomes: heterogeneity and composition   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Previous studies (Varshavsky, Bakayev and Georgiev, 1976a) have shown that chromatin subunits (mononucleosomes) and their oligomers in a mild staphylococcal nuclease digest of chromatin display a heterogeneous content of histone H1. We now report that a mild staphylococcal nuclease digest of either chromatin or nuclei from mouse Ehrlich tumor cells contains mononucleosomes of three discrete kinds. The smallest mononucleosome (MN1) contains all histones except H1 and a DNA fragment 140 base pairs (bp) long. The intermediate mononucleosome (MN2) contains all five histones and a DNA fragment 170 bp long. The third mononucleosome (MN3) also contains all five histones, but its DNA fragment is longer and more heterogeneous in size (180–200 bp). Most of the MN3 particles are rapidly converted by nuclease into mononucleosomes MN1 and MN2 There exists, however, a relatively nuclease-resistant subpopulation of the MN3 mononucleosomes. These 200 bp MN1 particles contain not only histones but also nonhistone proteins, and are significantly more resistant to nuclease than the bulk of MN3 particles and the smaller mononucleosomes MN1 and MN2.There are eight major kinds of staphylococcal nuclease-produced soluble subnucleosomes (SN). The SN1 is a set of naked double-stranded DNA fragments ~20 bp long. The SN2 is a complex of a specific basic nonhistone protein (molecular weight ~16,000 daltons) and a DNA fragment ~27 bp long. The SN3 contains histone H4, the above-mentioned specific nonhistone protein and a DNA fragment ~27 bp long. The SN4 contains histones H2a, H2b, H4 and a DNA fragment ~45 bp long. The SN5 contains histones H2a, H2b, H3 and a DNA fragment ~55 bp long. The SN6 is a complex of histone H1 and a DNA fragment ~35 bp long. Subnucleosomes SN7 and SN8 each contain all the histones except H1, and DNA fragments ~100 and ~120 bp long, respectively.Nuclease digestion of isolated mono- or dinucleosomes does not produce some of the subnucleosomes. These and related findings indicate that the cleavage required to generate these subnucleosomes result from some aspect of chromatin structure which is lost upon digestion to mono- and dinucleosomes.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号