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1.
Summary A physical map of safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) chloroplast DNA has been generated using SalI, PstI, KpnI and HindIII restriction endonucleases. The circular plastid genome (151 kbp) has the usual inverted repeat. Heterologous probes containing psbA, rbcL, atpA or rrnA structural genes mapped colinearly with spinach and other chloroplast genomes.  相似文献   

2.
Summary A physical map of safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) chloroplast DNA has been generated using Sall, Pstl, Kpnl and HindIII restriction endonucleases. Southern blots to single and double digests by these enzymes were hybridized with 32P-dCTP nick-translated Kpnl probes, which were individually isolated from agarose gels. The plastid genome was found to be circular (151 kbp), to contain a repeated sequence of about 25 kbp, and to have small and large single copy regions of approximately 20 and 81 kbp, respectively. Heterologous probes from spinach and Euglena containing psbA, rbcL, atpA or rrnA structural genes were also hybridized with such single and double restriction enzyme digests and mapped on this circular chlorpolast genome. The genetic map was found to be co-linear with that of spinach and many other higher plants.  相似文献   

3.
Summary DNA was isolated and purified from chloroplasts of safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.), digested with HindIII restriction endonuclease, and ligated into the HindIII site of the plasmid pUC9. Recombinant DNAs were isolated from ampicillin resistant white colonies which grew in the presence of the appropriate indicator, digested with HindIII, and then identified by comparison of agarose gel electrophoretic mobilities. HindIII digests of chloroplast DNA were used as a standard. Such recombinants were radiolabeled and hybridized with Southern blots of PstI, SalI, KpnI, and HindIII single and double digests of safflower chloroplast DNA. A physical map was subsequently generated showing the location of each recombinant on the circular plastid genome. Recombinants containing heterologous chloroplast gene markers from spinach or Euglena were also radiolabeled and mapped. The relative mapping positions of these genes are in good agreement with those which have previously been published for spinach and several other higher plants.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The restriction endonucleases SalGI and PstI have been used to construct a physical map of wheat ctDNA. The molecule was found to contain approximately 135 kbq, and in common with many other higher plant ctDNAs about 15% of the sequences are repeated in an inverted orientation. It was established by electron microscopy that, in wheat, each segment of the inverted repeat contains 21.0 kbp, and that the single copy regions separating the two repeated segments contain 12.8 kbp and 80.2 kbp. Blot hybridisation showed that one set of ribosomal genes is located in each segment of the inverted repeat region and the sizes of these genes were accurately determined by measuring the dimensions of hybrids between the chloroplast rRNAs and the identified Sal and Eco fragments on electron micrographs: the genes for the 16S and 23S rRNAs contain 1530 bp and 2850 bp respectively and are separated by a spacer region of 2350 bp. The Bgl fragment of maize ctDNA known to contain the structural gene for the large-subunit (LS) of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase was used as a probe to locate the LS gene in wheat ctDNA. A small (2.8 kbp) Eco fragment was found to contain most of the wheat LS gene and is derived from the larger single-copy region, 23.5 kbp away from one segment of the inverted repeat and 54.8 kbp from the other.  相似文献   

5.
Summary A restriction endonuclease fragment map of sugar beet chloroplast DNA (ctDNA) has been constructed with the enzymes SmaI, PstI and PvuII. The ctDNA was found to be contained in a circular molecule of 148.5 kbp. In common with many other higher plant ctDNAs, sugar beet ctDNA consists of two inverted repeat sequences of about 20.5 kbp separated by two single-copy regions of different sizes (about 23.2 and 84.3 kbp). Southern hybridization analyses indicated that the genes for rRNAs (23S+16S) and the large subunit of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase were located in the inverted repeats and the large single-copy regions, respectively.  相似文献   

6.
Localization of replication origins in pea chloroplast DNA.   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
The locations of the two replication origins in pea chloroplast DNA (ctDNA) have been mapped by electron microscopic analysis of restriction digests of supercoiled ctDNA cross-linked with trioxalen. Both origins of replication, identified as displacement loops (D-loops), were present in the 44-kilobase-pair (kbp) SalI A fragment. The first D-loop was located at 9.0 kbp from the closest SalI restriction site. The average size of this D-loop was about 0.7 kbp. The second D-loop started 14.2 kbp in from the same restriction site and ended at about 15.5 kbp, giving it a size of about 1.3 kbp. The orientation of these two D-loops on the restriction map of pea ctDNA was determined by analyzing SmaI, PstI, and SalI-SmaI restriction digests of pea ctDNA. One D-loop has been mapped in the spacer region between the 16S and 23S rRNA genes. The second D-loop was located downstream of the 23S rRNA gene. Denaturation mapping of recombinants pCP 12-7 and pCB 1-12, which contain both D-loops, confirmed the location of the D-loops in the restriction map of pea ctDNA. Denaturation-mapping studies also showed that the two D-loops had different base compositions; the one closest to a SalI restriction site denatured readily compared with the other D-loop. The recombinants pCP 12-7 and pCB 1-12 were found to be highly active in DNA synthesis when used as templates in a partially purified replication system from pea chloroplasts. Analysis of in vitro-synthesized DNA with either of these recombinants showed that full-length template DNA was synthesized. Recombinants from other regions of the pea chloroplast genome showed no significant DNA synthesis activity in vitro.  相似文献   

7.
Summary A PstI 7.7 kbp fragment from chloroplast (ct) DNA of spinach shows homology to an EcoRI 8.3 kbp fragment of mitochondrial (mt) DNA and in turn, both are homologous to a number of common regions of nuclear (n) DNA. The common area of homology between the chloroplast and mitochondrial fragments is between a KpnI 1.8 segment internal to the PstI sites in the ctDNA and an EcoRI/BamHI 2.9 kbp fragment at one end of the mitochondrial 8.3 kbp fragment. The KpnI 1.8 kbp ctDNA fragment is within a structural gene for the P700 chlorophyll a apoprotein. Further analysis of this KpnI 1.8 kbp fragment confined the homologous region in mtDNA to a ct 0.8 kbp HpaII fragment. These smaller pieces of the organellar genomes share homologies with nuclear DNA as well as displaying unique hybridization sites. The observations reported here demonstrate that there is a common or closely related sequence in all three genetic compartments of the cell.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The circular chloroplast DNA from three species of plants in the taxonomic family Leguminosae were examined using electron microscopic techniques and restriction endonuclease digestion. Chloroplast DNAs from chickpea (Cicer arietinum), mung bean (Vigna radiata), and soy bean (Glycine max) were found to range in size from 119–151 kilobase pairs by contour length measurements. Sizes of the chloroplast DNAs have been further confirmed using different restriction endonucleases. Two of the chloroplast DNAs examined, soy bean and mung bean, contain a region approximately 15.9–18% of their monomer length that is repeated in reverse polarity. This repeated region separates a small unique region that ranges in size from 18.75–20.4 kilobase pairs and a large unique region that ranges in size from 73.4–85 kbp. This feature was not found in the chloroplast DNA of chickpea. R-loop hybridizations performed using chloroplast ribosomal RNAs demonstrate that the two ribosomal gene sets of the mung been and soy bean are arranged in inverted orientation within this repeated region. In contrast, the chickpea chloroplast DNA posesses a single ribosomal RNA gene set in the circular molecule. In all three chloroplast DNAs examined, the genes encoding the chloroplast 23S and 16S ribosomal RNA genes are separated by a spacer region which ranges in size from 2.2 to 2.48 kbp.  相似文献   

9.
A large plasmid containing all delta-endotoxin genes was isolated from Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis; restricted by BamHI, EcoRI, HindIII, KpnI, PstI, SacI, and SalI; and cloned as appropriate libraries in Escherichia coli. The libraries were screened for inserts containing recognition sites for BamHI, SacI, and SalI. Each was labeled with 32P and hybridized to Southern blots of gels with fragments generated by cleaving the plasmid with several restriction endonucleases, to align at least two fragments of the relevant enzymes. All nine BamHI fragments and all eight SacI fragments were mapped in two overlapping linkage groups (with total sizes of about 76 and 56 kb, respectively). The homology observed between some fragments is apparently a consequence of the presence of transposons and repeated insertion sequences. Four delta-endotoxin genes (cryIVB-D and cytA) and two genes for regulatory polypeptides (of 19 and 20 kDa) were localized on a 21-kb stretch of the plasmid; without cytA, they are placed on a single BamHI fragment. This convergence enables subcloning of delta-endotoxin genes (excluding cryIVA, localized on the other linkage group) as an intact natural fragment.  相似文献   

10.
Leptospira interrogans serovar icterohaemorrhagiae strains Ictero No. I and RGA and serovar copenhageni strains M20, Shiromizu and Shibaura were examined by restriction endonuclease DNA analysis. Fifteen endonucleases (AluI, BamHI, BglII, EcoRI, HaeIII, HhaI, HindIII, KpnI, PstI, SacI, SalI, SmaI, StyI, XbaI and XhoI) were used as the digesting enzymes. Strain Ictero No. I showed endonuclease cleavage patterns which differed from those of the other four strains only when it was digested with enzymes KpnI and HindIII. When digested with KpnI, an extra band of about 5.4 kb was clearly produced, and when digested with HindIII, an extra band of about 25 kb was produced. When the other 13 enzymes were used, no differences were found between the endonuclease cleavage patterns among the five strains. Moreover, strains RGA, M20, Shiromizu and Shibaura could not be distinguished by the restriction endonuclease DNA analysis using all 15 endonucleases. In addition, six newly isolated leptospires from patients with leptospirosis and from Rattus norvegicus were compared with the Ictero No. I and M20 strains, by restriction endonuclease DNA analysis using enzymes KpnI and HindIII. Three leptospires belonging to serovar icterohaemorrhagiae showed the same endonuclease cleavage patterns as the M20 strain. The other three strains, which belong to serovar copenhageni, showed almost the same endonuclease cleavage patterns as the M20 strain; only the Kai ima 702 strain produced an extra band which was not identical to the Ictero No. I-specific extra band when digested with HindIII. The leptospiral restriction endonuclease DNA analysis has revealed taxonomic structures that are unrecognized by serology alone.  相似文献   

11.
The Eco RI fragment of hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA isolated from human blood plasma Dane particles were inserted into plasmid pUC8 Eco RI site and transformed into E. coli JM103 host. Two recombinants pTWL1 and pTWL2 were found to carry 3.2 kbp fragment and proved to have HBV genome by Southern hybridization method. The 1.4 kbp Bam HI fragment which carried the hepatitis B viral surface antigen (HBsAg) gene, obtained via Bam HI digestion of Dane particles DNA which was made fully double stranded by endogenous DNA polymerase reaction, was also inserted into plasmid pUC8 Bam HI site. Four recombinant clones, pTWS1, pTWS2, pTWS3, and pTWS4 were found. Only one of the clones pTWS1 carried the HBsAg gene in a correct orientation with respect to the lac promoter sequence. The physical mapping of HBV DNA was performed with several restriction endonucleases. Our results indicated that the HBV DNA insert contains unique XbaI and HpaI cleavage sites and lacks the cleavage sites for the HindIII, SmaI, KpnI, SalI, and SstI endonucleases. The locations of Bam HI, BglII, and HincII endonucleases cleavage sites within the cloned HBV DNA of the pTWL1 plasmid were similar to that HBV DNA of adw and adw2 subtypes.  相似文献   

12.
ABSTRACT. Analysis of total DNA isolated from the Chrysophyte alga Ochromonas danica revealed, in addition to nuclear DNA, two genomes present as numerous copies per cell. The larger genome (?120 kilobase pairs or kbp) is the plastid DNA, which is identified by its hybridization to plasmids containing sequences for the photosynthesis genes rbcL, psbA, and psbC. The smaller genome (40 kbp) is the mitochondrial genome as identified by its hybridization with plasmids containing gene sequences of plant cytochrome oxidase subunits I and II. Both the 120- and 40-kbp genomes contain genes for the small and large subunits of rDNA. The mitochondrial genome is linear with terminal inverted repeats of about 1.6 kbp. Two other morphologically similar species were examined, Ochromonas minuta and Poteriochromonas malhamensis. All three species have linear mitochondrial DNA of 40 kbp. Comparisons of endonuclease restriction-fragment patterns of the mitochondrial and chloroplast DNAs as well as those of their nuclear rDNA repeats failed to reveal any fragment shared by any two of the species. Likewise, no common fragment size was detected by hybridization with plasmids containing heterologous DNA or with total mitochondrial DNA of O. danica; these observations support the taxonomic assignment of these three organisms to different species. The Ochromonas mitochondrial genomes are the first identified in the chlorophyll a/c group of algae. Combining these results with electron microscopic observations of putative mitochondrial genomes reported for other chromophytes and published molecular studies of other algal groups suggests that all classes of eukaryote algae may have mitochondrial genomes < 100 kbp in size, more like other protistans than land plants.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The restriction map of the rDNA unit of Helianthus annuus was constructed using EcoRI, BamHI, HindIII, KpnI and SacI restriction enzymes. Variations in this map among 61 ecotypes representing 39 species of the genus Helianthus were analyzed. The sizes of the rDNA unit ranged from 9.8 to 11.0 kbp, due to a length-repeat heterogeneity of the external non-transcribed spacer by increments of 200 base pair segments. Lengthrepeat heterogeneity and restriction polymorphism were found to be characteristic of populations or species of Helianthus. Restriction patterns and thermal melting with probes of a cloned H. annuus ENTS segment allowed us to differentiate species from each other. However, most lines of the cultivated sunflower were found to be identical on the basis of the physical properties of their ribosomal DNA.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Labelled chloroplast rRNAs from Spinacia oleracea were hybridized to restriction endonuclease digests of chloroplast DNA from Oenothera hookeri and Euglena gracilis, to mitochondrial DNA of Acanthamoeba castellanii, and to DNA of the E. coli rrn B operon in the transducing phage lambda rifd18. The degree of homology is greatest for the 16S rRNA gene. Greater than 90% occurs between the two higher plant genes, 80% homology to the lower plant gene, 60%–70% homology to the bacterial gene, and 20% homology to the mitochondrial gene. The degree of hybridization varied considerably for the 23S and the 5S rRNA genes. Very high homology exists between the two higher plant genes, only about 50% homology for both the Euglena and bacterial genes, and no significant homology for the mitochondrial genes. These results show that any chloroplast (or E. coli) rRNA may be used as a probe to identify rRNA genes in other ctDNAs.Two RNA populations, each enriched for a different ctDNA-encoded mRNA, proved useful in the location of these genes on both higher plant ctDNAs. No significant hybridization was obtained using these probes to the Euglena ctDNA which seems to be too distantly related.Abbreviations Md megadalton, 106 dalton - bp, kbp base pair, kilo base pair - SSC Standard saline citrate, 1 times SSC is 0.15M sodium, chloride, 0.015 M trisodium citrate, pH, 6.8 - mtDNA mitochondrial DNA - ctDNA chloroplast DNA - ctrRNA chloroplast ribosomal RNA  相似文献   

15.
A combined approach was used to derive a detailed physical map of Nicotiana tabacum chloroplast DNA for the restriction enzymes SalI, SmaI, KpnI, and BamHI. Complete maps for the restriction enzymes SalI, SmaI, and KpnI were derived by using two-dimensional agarose gel analysis of fragments obtained by reciprocal double digestion of chloroplast DNA. We have characterized a complete cloned library of N. tabacum chloroplast DNA which contains overlapping restriction fragments resulting from partial digestion by BamHI. With these clones and existing data, we used a novel computer-aided analysis to derive a detailed map for the enzyme BamHI. A comparison and compilation of all published N. tabacum chloroplast DNA restriction maps is presented. Differences between ours and a previously published SmaI and BamHI restriction map are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The closed circular DNA of pea chloroplast has been digested with restriction endonucleases SalI, SmaI, BamHI, XbaI, XhoI, HindIII, and EcoRI. A physical restriction map of pea ctDNA has been constructed by mapping the SalI and SmaI sites. The pea ctDNA has been found to contain one set of ribosomal RNA genes by Southern hybridization of restriction endonuclease digest, R-loop studies, and DNA-DNA heteroduplex mapping. The 23 S and 16 S RNA genes are confined to a DNA region of 3.0 and 1.5 kbp, respectively. The two rRNA chains are separated by a spacer region of 2.2 kbp.  相似文献   

17.
Summary An EcoRI 2.7 kbp fragment from Chlorella ellipsoidea chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) cloned in YIp5 was shown to promote autonomous replication in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The fragment was localized in the small single copy region close to the inverted repeat. The ARS activity (autonomously replicating sequences in yeast) was found to be confined within a subclone of a ca. 300 bp HindIII fragment. Sequence analysis of this fragment revealed its high AT content and the presence of several direct and inverted repeats and a few elements that were related to the yeast ARS consensus sequence. Electron microscopic studies revealed that this sequence did not coincide with the primary replication origin of chloroplast DNA. The functioning of this sequence as a possible origin of plasmid replication in vivo is discussed. This is the first report on Chlorella cpDNA sequence. re]19850821 rv]19851211 ac]19851216  相似文献   

18.
K. Suzuki  N. Ohta  T. Kuroiwa 《Protoplasma》1992,171(1-2):80-84
Summary The amounts of cell-nuclear DNA (cl-DNA), mitochondrial DNA (mt-DNA) and chloroplast DNA (cp-DNA) inCyanidioschyzon merolae were estimated by using a video-intensified microscope (VIM) system.C. merolae had the smallest amount of cell-nuclear DNA among eukaryotes. The results show that a cell-nucleus, a mitochondrion and a chloroplast contain an average 8.0×103kbp, 1.6×103kbp, and 5.0×103kbp, respectively. To confirm these results, cl-DNA, mt-DNA, and cp-DNA were isolated from cells by density centrifugation on Hoechst 33258/CsCl after density centrifugation on ethidium bromide/CsCl. The amounts of cl-DNA, mt-DNA, and cp-DNA obtained from the bands supported the data shown by the VIM-system. The cytochemical and biochemical characteristics were compared with those ofCyanidium caldarium RK-1 andC. caldarium Forma A. The values of cl-DNA and cp-DNA ofC. merolae were about 1.716 and 1.709, respectively. The order in density was different from that ofC. caldarium Forma A but very similar to that ofC. caldarium RK-1. However, the restriction patterns of cp-DNA inC. merolae differed from those ofC. caldarium RK-1.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Summary The genus Allium contains many economically important species, including the bulb onion, chive, garlic, Japanese bunching onion, and leek. Phylogenetic relationships among the cultivated alliums are not well understood, and taxonomic classifications are based on relatively few morphological characters. Chloroplast DNA is highly conserved and useful in determining phylogenetic relationships. The size of the chloroplast genome of Allium cepa was estimated at 140 kb and restriction enzyme sites were mapped for KpnI, PstI, PvuII, SalI, XbaI, and XhoI. Variability at restriction enzyme sites in the chloroplast DNA was studied for at least three accessions of each of six cultivated, old-world Allium species. Of 189 restriction enzyme sites detected with 12 enzymes, 15 mutations were identified and used to estimate phylogenetic relationships. Cladistic analysis based on Wagner and Dollo parsimony resulted in a single, most-parsimonious tree of 16 steps and supported division of the species into sections. Allium species in section Porrum were distinguished from species in sections Cepa and Phyllodolon. Two species in section Rhiziridium, A. schoenoprasum and A. tuberosum, differed by five mutations and were placed in separate lineages. Allium cepa and A. fistulosum shared the loss of a restriction enzyme site and were phylogenetically closer to each other than to A. schoenoprasum. This study demonstrates the usefulness of restriction enzyme site analysis of the chloroplast genome in the elucidation of phylogenetic relationships in Allium.  相似文献   

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