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1.
M Rosenberg  S Segal  E L Kuff  M F Singer 《Cell》1977,11(4):845-857
DNA fragments containing monkey DNA sequences have been isolated from defective SV40 genomes that carry host sequences in place of portions of the SV40 genome. The fragments were isolated by restriction endonuclease cleavage and contain segments homologous to sequences in both the highly repetitive and unique (or less repetitive) classes of monkey DNA. The complete nucleotide sequence of one such fragment [151 base pairs (bp)] predominantly homologous to the highly reiterated class of monkey DNA was determined using both RNA and DNA sequencing methods. The nucleotide sequence of this homogeneous DNA segment does not contain discernible multiple internal repeating units but only a few short oligonucleotide repeats. The reiteration frequency of the sequence in the monkey genome is >106. Digestion of total monkey DNA (from uninfected cells) with endonuclease R Hind III produces relatively large amounts of discrete DNA fragments that contain extensive regions homologous to the fragment isolated from the defective SV40 DNA.A second fragment, also containing monkey sequences, was isolated from the same defective substituted SV40 genome. The nucleotide sequence of the 33 bp of this second fragment that are contiguous to the 151 bp fragment has also been determined.The sequences in both fragments are also present in other, independently derived, defective substituted SV40 genomes.  相似文献   

2.
A dispersed middle repetitive DNA sequence isolated originally from human chromosome 12 did not show homology with rodent DNA under standard conditions of Southern DNA blot analysis. The evolutionary relationship of this human repetitive DNA to that of other primates was investigated using three hybridization methods: DNA dot blot, Southern DNA blot analysis, and chromosome in situ hybridization. Homology with the human repetitive DNA was found throughout the suborder Anthropoidea, in fourteen ape and New and Old World monkey species. In addition, the human pattern of hybridization to noncentromeric regions of all chromosomes was seen. No hybridization by any of the three techniques was found in five species of the suborder Prosimii. The phenomenon of marked differences in sequence homology and copy number of dispersed repetitive DNA from closely related species has been observed in protozoans (Plasmodia), Drosophila, sea urchins, mice and the great apes (Hominoidea). We report here a similar phenomenon that may have occurred at an early stage in primate evolution.  相似文献   

3.
Cleavage of sheep DNA with the restriction endonuclease EcoR I yields three discrete size classes (370, 435 and 800bp) of highly repetitive DNA. The 435bp long fragment was cloned and its nucleotide sequence determined. All three classes of repetitive DNA are related to each other as seen by cross-hybridisation. They are tandemly arranged in the genome and in situ hybridisation to sheep lymphocyte chromosomes show their location mainly in the centromere region of all chromosomes. The primary sequence of the repetitive DNA shows a close structural similarity to the bovine 1.715 satellite DNA, however only poor cross-hybridisation between the sheep and cattle repetitive DNA could be shown.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Nucleotide sequence of a reiterated rat DNA fragment   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
R C Gupta 《FEBS letters》1983,164(1):175-180
A reiterated component of rat DNA was isolated by restriction with HindIII endonuclease and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Sequence analysis revealed that the fragment was 179 nucleotides long. Unlike the known 370N reiterated rat DNA fragment which contained a high m5C content (2.7 mole%), this repetitive element contained a rather low m5C content (0.5 mole%). The present rat repetitive sequence appeared to be of alpha-type as shown by its significant homologies with alpha DNA sequences of African green monkey and human. The possibility of sequence heterogeneity is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Chromosome-specific subfamilies within human alphoid repetitive DNA   总被引:21,自引:0,他引:21  
Nucleotide sequence data of about 20 X 10(3) base-pairs of the human tandemly repeated alphoid DNA are presented. The DNA sequences were determined from 45 clones containing EcoRI fragments of alphoid DNA isolated from total genomic DNA. Thirty of the clones contained a complete 340 base-pair dimer unit of the repeat. The remaining clones contained alphoid DNA with fragment lengths of 311, 296, 232, 170 and 108 base-pairs. The sequences obtained were compared with an average alphoid DNA sequence determined by Wu & Manuelidis (1980). The divergences ranged from 0.6 to 24.6% nucleotide changes for the first monomer and from 0 to 17.8% for the second monomer of the repeat. On the basis of identical nucleotide changes at corresponding positions, the individual repeat units could be shown to belong to one of several distinct subfamilies. The number of nucleotide changes defining a subfamily generally constitutes the majority of nucleotide changes found in a member of that subfamily. From an evaluation of the proportion of the total amount of alphoid DNA, which is represented by the clones studied, it is estimated that the number of subfamilies of this repeat may be equal to or exceed the number of chromosomes. The expected presence of only one or a few distinct subfamilies on individual chromosomes is supported by the study, also presented, of the nucleotide sequence of 17 cloned fragments of alphoid repetitive DNA from chromosome 7. These chromosome-specific repeats all contain the characteristic pattern of 36 common nucleotide changes that defines one of the subfamilies described. A unique restriction endonuclease (NlaIII) cleavage site present in this subfamily may be useful as a genetic marker of this chromosome. A family member of the interspersed Alu repetitive DNA was also isolated and sequenced. This Alu repeat has been inserted into the human alphoid repetitive DNA, in the same way as the insertion of an Alu repeat into the African green monkey alphoid DNA.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The DNA of Apodemus argenteus was digested with DraI, and the resultant DraI fragment of highly repetitive DNA was isolated and analyzed by DNA filter hybridization, cloning, sequencing, and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Southern blot hybridization and nucleotide sequencing revealed that most of the DraI fragment consisted of a 230-bp repeating unit and contained no sex-chromosome-specific nucleotide sequences. The DraI fragment included the CENP-B box-like sequence, with a strong homology to the human CENP-B box sequence. FISH revealed that the DraI fragment was specific to all pericentromeric C-band-positive regions, as well as to the C-block of the X chromosome. No hybridization signals were obtained from A. speciosus, A. peninsulae peninsulae, A.p. giliacus, A. agrarius, A. sylvaticus, A. semotus, or Mus musculus when the DraI fragment was used as probe. Peptide nucleic acid (PNA)-FISH using the CENP-B box-like sequence in the DraI fragments as probe suggested that this nucleotide sequence was also specific to all pericentromeric C-heterochromatic regions of A. argenteus chromosomes. Zoo-blot hybridization using DraI-digested genomic DNA from three species of Apodemus (namely, A. argenteus, A. speciosus, and A. peninsulae) and from Mus musculus strongly suggested that the consensus DraI fragment contained nucleotide sequences that were species-specific for A. argenteus. These results also suggest that A. argenteus is phylogenetically distant from other Apodemus species examined, as well as the possibility that the DraI fragment might be related directly to the delayed quinacrine mustard fluorescence of many pericentromeric C-heterochromatic regions of the chromosomes in A. argenteus.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Several clones containing clusters of repetitive elements were isolated from a human chromosome 22 specific library. An EcoRI-XhoI fragment of 860bp was subcloned and was shown to belong to a family of tandemly repeated DNA linked to the Y-specific 3.4 kb HaeIII band. This probe hybridizes to several sets of sequences or subfamilies. The most abundant subfamily is a 1.8kb long sequence containing one EcoRV site, and in most repeats, one AvaII and one KpnI site. Using human-rodent somatic cell hybrid DNA, we have shown that this cluster is present on human chromosome 9 although presence on chromosome 15 is not excluded. Another subfamily, 6.1 kb long, appears to be exclusive of chromosome 16. By in situ hybridization with metaphasic chromosomes, these sets of repeats were mapped to the constitutive heterochromatin of a few chromosomes. Coexistence in one genome of long tandem repeats of distinct organization but similar length may represent the outcome of a continuous process of fixation of variant sequences. Homologous repeats are also abundant in four higher primate genomes (Orangutan, gorilla, chimpanzee, and man) but absent in other primates (African green monkey, rhesus monkey, baboon, and mouse lemur).  相似文献   

10.
In an effort to characterize sites of recombination between SV40 and monkey DNA, we have determined the primary sequence of a large portion of the SV40 variant, designated 1103. This virus contains DNA sequences derived both from the wild type SV40 genome and from the permissive monkey cell in which the virus was propagated. Further, the monkey sequences included in the defective genome are homologous to both highly repeated monkey DNA (alpha component) and sequences that are infrequently repeated in the monkey genome. The regions of the 1103 genome where DNA sequences were determined include 1) the segments of the variant that surround joints connecting SV40 and monkey sequences, 2) the segment that contains the joint between monkey sequences of high and low reiteration frequency, and 3) the DNA segment of the variant that is homologous to monkey alpha component DNA. Comparison of the data obtained from the sequences analysis of the SV40 variants 1103 and CVP8/1/P2 (EcoRI res) (described in Wakamiya, T., McCutchan, T., Rosenberg, M., and Singer, M. (1979) J. Biol. Chem 254, 3584-3591) reveals certain similarities between the two that may be involved in eukaryotic recombination and defective variant formation.  相似文献   

11.
The entire nucleotide sequence (1210-base-pair repeating units) of a defective variant of simian virus 40 is presented. Within this variant there are deletions of large portions of the wild type genome and an inversion within the remaining wild type viral sequences. In addition, the defective variant contains DNA sequences derived from the permissive monkey cells in which the virus was propagated. The monkey sequences include a portion that is homologous to sequences within highly repeated monkey DNA (alpha component) as well as portions derived from sequences that are infrequently repeated in the monkey genome. One out of every three to four of the tandem 1210-base-pair repeat units contains in addition, a duplication of a part of the monkey sequences. The sequence information defines the structures of a number of recombinational joints which result from deletions, inversions, duplications, and insertions of host sequences into the viral genome. The data demonstrate that the various recombinational events that resulted in the formation of this defective variant did not depend on extensive homology between recombining segments.  相似文献   

12.
A repetitive DNA sequence, MS2, was isolated from EcoRI-digested genomic DNA of the vole, Microtus subarvalis. The fragment was cloned and sequenced. Sequence analysis of this 1194-bp fragment revealed a 156-bp region demonstrating a 55% homology with the mouse B1 repeat. The remaining MS2 sequence shows no significant homology with other known GenBank sequences. The results of in situ hybridization of MS2 on vole metaphase chromosomes indicate the fragment is confined to heterochromatin blocks of the sex chromosomes in all but one species (M. arvalis). Distribution of MS2 sequences provides evidence for heterogeneity of the giant heterochromatin blocks of the XY Chromosomes (Chrs) in voles, for the unique cluster-like localization of MS2 within these blocks. Received: 10 October 1995 / Accepted: 30 March 1996  相似文献   

13.
We have isolated four repetitive DNA fragments from maize DNA. Only one of these sequences showed homology to sequences within the EMBL database, despite each having an estimated copy number of between 3 x 104 and 5 x 104 per haploid genome. Hybridization of the four repeats to maize mitotic chromosomes showed that the sequences are evenly dispersed throughout most, but not all, of the maize genome, whereas hybridization to yeast colonies containing random maize DNA fragments inserted into yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs) indicated that there was considerable clustering of the repeats at a local level. We have exploited the distribution of the repeats to produce repetitive sequence fingerprints of individual YAC clones. These fingerprints not only provide information about the occurrence and organization of the repetitive sequences within the maize genome, but they can also be used to determine the organization of overlapping maize YAC clones within a contiguous fragment (contigs). Key words : maize, repetitive DNA, YACs.  相似文献   

14.
K Okumura  R Kiyama    M Oishi 《Nucleic acids research》1987,15(18):7477-7489
Previously, we reported a recombination-prone human alphoid-like repetitive DNA (Sau3A family) which is characterized by abundance in the extrachromosomal fraction and restriction fragment length polymorphism. We suggested a specific homologous recombination to be responsible for the DNA excision from the chromosomes and also the sequence rearrangement in the chromosomes. In order to investigate the nature of the recombination further, 8 different clones were obtained which hybridized with Sau3A probe among over 1,500 extrachromosomal DNA clones. Restriction mapping and nucleotide sequence analyses showed two to be Sau3A monomers and dimers, four Sau3A recombinants, as observed previously, one a recombinant of the Sau3A-related sequence on chromosome 17, and one a new Sau3A-related sequence. Sequence analyses of the recombination junctions in the recombinant clones indicated a specific homologous recombination also to be responsible for all but one clone. The molecular mechanism and biological significance associated with the recombination are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Primate evolution of a human chromosome 1 hypervariable repetitive element   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Summary The clone designated hMF #1 represents a clustered DNA family, located on chromosome 1, consisting of tandem arrays displaying a monomeric length of 40 bp and a repetition frequency of approximately 7×103 copies per haploid genome. The sequence hMF #1 reveals multiple restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) when human genomic DNA is digested with a variety of 4–6-bp recognition sequence restriction enzymes (i.e., Taq I, Eco RI, Pst I, etc.). When hamster and mouse genomic DNA was digested and analyzed, no cross-species homology could be observed. Further investigation revealed considerable hybridization in the higher primates (chimpanzee, gorilla, and orangutan) as well as some monkey species.The evolutionary relationship of this repetitive DNA sequence, found in humans, to that of other primates was explored using two hybridization methods: DNA dot blot to establish copy number and Southern DNA analysis to examine the complexity of the RFLPs. Homology to the hMF #1 sequence was found throughout the suborder Anthropoidea in 14 ape and New and Old World monkey species. However the sequence was absent in one species of the suborder Prosimii. Several discrepancies between established evolutionary relationships and those predicted by hMF #1 exist, which suggests that repetitive elements of this type are not reliable indicators of phylogenetic branching patterns. The phenomenon of marked diversity between sequence homologies and copy numbers of dispersed repetitive DNA of closely related species has been observed inDrosophila mice,Galago, and higher primates. We report here a similar phenomenon for a clustered repeat that may have originated at an early stage of primate evolution.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The New Zealand hagfish, Eptatretus cirrhatus, is known to eliminate parts of its chromosomes during embryogenesis from presumptive somatic cells. Electrophoresis of germ line and somatic DNAs of this species, after treatment with the restriction endonucleases DraI and EcoRI, revealed three fragments of DNA that were restricted to the germ line. DNA filter hybridization experiments demonstrated that these fragments were present almost exclusively in the germ line DNA of E. cirrhatus and that they were highly and tandemly repeated. Thus, these DNA fragments appeared to be eliminated during embryogenesis. Moreover, one fragment (a DraI fragment) cross-hybridized with the germ line DNA from other species of hagfish, namely, Eptatretus okinoseanus and Paramyxine atami. Molecular cloning and sequence analysis revealed that the DraI fragment was composed mainly of closely related sequences of 85 bp in length and that this sequence was about 75% homologous to the sequence of EEEo2 (eliminated element of E. okinoseanus 2) which is a germ line-restricted and highly repetitive sequence that was isolated previously from E. okinoseanus. The other two fragments were composed of three families of closely related sequences that were 172 bp long (designated EEEc1), 61 bp long (EEEc2) and 54 bp long (EEEc3). Fluorescence in situ hybridization experiments revealed that each eliminated element was distributed on several chromosomes that are limited to germ cells. EEEo2 was dispersed on 12 C-band-positive chromosomes. EEEc1 and EEEc3 were dispersed on all C-band-positive and several C-band-negative chromosomes. By contrast, EEEc2 was located to terminal regions of several C-band-negative chromosomes. These results suggest that the eliminated chromosomes in hagfish are mosaics of highly repeated, germ line-restricted families of DNA sequences. Received: ██; in revised form: 25 October 1997 / Accepted: ██  相似文献   

18.
Silene latifolia has heteromorphic sex chromosomes, the X and Y chromosomes. The Y chromosome, which is thought to carry the male determining gene, was isolated by UV laser microdissection and amplified by degenerate oligonucleotide-primed PCR. In situ chromosome suppression of the amplified Y chromosome DNA in the presence of female genomic DNA as a competitor showed that the microdissected Y chromosome DNA did not specifically hybridize to the Y chromosome, but hybridized to all chromosomes. This result suggests that the Y chromosome does not contain Y chromosome-enriched repetitive sequences. A repetitive sequence in the microdissected Y chromosome, RMY1, was isolated while screening repetitive sequences in the amplified Y chromosome. Part of the nucleotide sequence shared a similarity to that of X-43.1, which was isolated from microdissected X chromosomes. Since fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis with RMY1 demonstrated that RMY1 was localized at the ends of the chromosome, RMY1 may be a subtelomeric repetitive sequence. Regarding the sex chromosomes, RMY1 was detected at both ends of the X chromosome and at one end near the pseudoautosomal region of the Y chromosome. The different localization of RMY1 on the sex chromosomes provides a clue to the problem of how the sex chromosomes arose from autosomes.  相似文献   

19.
Previously, we showed that a human repetitive DNA sequence (Sau3A family) belonging to a satellite DNA is unstable and constantly excised from the chromosomes (R. Kiyama, H. Matsui, and M. Oishi, 1986, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83, 4665). The unusual property of the repetitive DNA, along with another repetitive DNA (Alu sequence), was further investigated by in situ hybridization in several different human cells including HeLa, bone marrow, and peripheral blood cells. We found that the excised repetitive DNA sequences are localized not only in nuclei, but also in cytoplasm. These results have confirmed the instability of these DNA sequences in the chromosomes and further suggest that the alpha satellite DNA and the Alu sequence which were excised from the chromosomes are released from nuclei to cytoplasm.  相似文献   

20.
C-bands are observed in the centromeric regions of only three pairs of autosomes and the distal portion of the small acrocentric Y in a total complement of 44 chromosomes of a male Presbytis e. entellus. Simultaneously treated slides of a Rhesus monkey, however, have C-bands in all the 42 chromosomes. The lack of C-bands may be due to (1) absence of highly repetitive DNA in the centromeric region of certain chromosomes or (2) presence of minute quantity of such DNA which is imperceptible or (3) different types of centromeric heterochromatin with a varying degree of repetition of DNA sequences all of which do not react in similar manner to various techniques employed at present. It is hypothesized that the centromeric heterochromatin rich in satellite DNA helps in withstanding the force of excessive coiling of chromosomes at the centromere to facilitate the functioning of the genes for microtubular protein during cell division when other genes are rendered inactive due to compactness of chromosomes.  相似文献   

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