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1.
Recombinant plasmids containing highly repetitive Physarum DNA segments were identified by colony hybridisation using a radioactively-labelled total Physarum DNA probe. A large number of these clones also hybridised to a foldback DNA probe purified from Physarum nuclear DNA. The foldback DNA probe was characterised by reassociation kinetic analysis. About one-half of this component was shown to consist of highly repeated sequences with a kinetic complexity of 1100 bp and an average repetition frequency of 5200. Direct screening of 67 recombinant plasmids for foldback sequences using the electron microscope revealed that about one-half were located in segments of DNA containing highly repetitive sequences; the remainder were present in clones containing low-copy number repeated elements. Analysis of two DNA clones showed that they contained repetitive elements located in over half of all DNA segments containing highly repetitive DNA and that the foci containing these highly repetitive sequences had different sequence arrangements. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that the most highly repeated DNA sequence families in the Physarum genome are few in number and are clustered together in different arrangements in about one-sixth of the genome. Over one-half of the foldback DNA complement in the Physarum genome is derived from these segments of DNA.  相似文献   

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In the chicken genome there are middle repetitive DNA sequences with a clustered organization. Each cluster is composed of members of different families of repeated DNA sequences and usually contains only one member of each family. Many clusters have the same assortment of repeated sequences but they are in scrambled order from cluster to cluster. These clusters usually exceed 20 × 103 bases in length and comprise at least 10% of the repeated DNA of the chicken. The repeated sequences that are cluster components are extensively methylated. Methylation was detected by comparing HpaII and MspI digests of total DNA, where the occurrence of the sequence C-m5C-G-G is indicated when HpaII (cleaves C-C-G-G) fragments are larger than those generated by MspI (cleaves C-m5C-G-G or C-C-G-G). In hybridization experiments with Southern (1975) blots of total DNA digested with either HpaII or MspI, the cloned probes representing clustered repeated sequences showed a dramatic difference in the lengths of restriction fragments detected in the two digests. Many of the sequences that comprise these clusters are methylated in most of their genomic occurrences. There are patterns of methylation that are reproduced faithfully from copy to copy. The overall distribution of methylation within clusters seems to be regional, with long methylated DNA segments interrupted by specific undermethylated regions.  相似文献   

4.
The relationship between nuclear DNA and cytoplasmic membrane-associated DNA, extracted from a human lymphocyte cell line, was examined by DNA-DNA reannealing and by dissociation of renatured molecules. Up to 2% of the total cellular DNA is found in the cytoplasm as cytoplasmic membrane-associated DNA and of this 2%, approximately 70% is comprised of repeated sequences. These sequences are homologous to only about 4% of the repeated sequences of nuclear DNA. The repeat fraction of cytoplasmic membrane-associated DNA consists of sequences which are only moderately repeated. The number of copies in the average “family” could range from about 1500 copies to as few as 25 copies. A small rapidly reannealing portion of cytoplasmic membrane-associated DNA (C0t < 4 × 10?3) appears to consist of sequences derived from a single “family”.About 30% of cytoplasmic membrane-associated DNA reassociates slowly with a C0t12 value of 223 (unique cytoplasmic membrane-associated DNA). This fraction has homology with about 11% of the unique sequences of nuclear DNA. However, unique cytoplasmic membrane-associated DNA comprises only about 0·6% of the total cellular DNA. If it is assumed that each cell has the same amount of cytoplasmic membrane-associated DNA, homology with 11% of the unique sequences of nuclear DNA suggests that different cells may have different unique nucleotide sequences in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

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X Tian  J E Strassmann  D C Queller 《Heredity》2014,112(2):215-218
Eukaryotic protein sequences often contain amino-acid homopolymers that consist of a single amino acid repeated from several to dozens of times. Some of these are functional but others may persist largely because of high expansion rates due to DNA slippage. However, very long homopolymers with over a hundred repeats are very rare. We report an extraordinarily long homopolymer consisting of 306 tandem serine repeats from the single-celled eukaryote Dictyostelium discoideum, which also has a multicellular stage. The gene has a paralog with 132 repeats and orthologs, also with high serine repeat numbers, in various other Dictyostelid species. The conserved gene structure and protein sequences suggest that the homopolymer is functional. The high codon diversity and very poor alignment of serine codons in this gene between species similarly indicate functionality. This is because the serine homopolymer is conserved despite much DNA sequence change. A survey of other very long amino-acid homopolymers in eukaryotes shows that high codon diversity is the rule, suggesting that these too may be functional.  相似文献   

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A ubiquitous family of repeated DNA sequences in the human genome   总被引:88,自引:0,他引:88  
Renatured DNA from human and many other eukaryotes is known to contain 300-nucleotide duplex regions formed from renatured repeated sequences. These short repeated DNA sequences are widely believed to be interspersed with single copy DNA sequences. In this work we show that at least half of these 300-nucleotide duplexes share a cleavage site for the restriction enzyme AluI. This site is located 170 nucleotides from one end. This Alu family of repeated sequences makes up at least 3% of the genome and is present in several hundred thousand copies.Inverted repeated sequences are also known to contain a short 300-nucleotide duplex region. We find that at least half of the 300-nucleotide duplex regions in inverted repeated sequences also have an AluI restriction site located 170 nucleotides from one end.By driven renaturation techniques, the Alu family is shown to be distributed over a minimum range of 30% to 60% of the genome. (The breadth of this range reflects the presence of inverted repeated sequences which, in part, include the Alu family.) These findings imply that the interspersion pattern of repeated and single copy sequences in human DNA is largely dominated by one family of repeated sequences.  相似文献   

9.
The genome of parsley was studied by DNA/DNA reassociation to reveal its spectrum of DNA reiteration frequencies and sequence organization. The reassociation of 300 nucleotide DNA fragments indicates the presence of four classes of DNA differing in repetition frequency. These classes are: highly repetitive sequences, fast intermediate repetitive sequences, slow intermediate repetitive sequences, and unique sequences. The repeated classes are reiterated on average 136,000, 3000, and 42 times respectively. A minor part of the genome is made up of palindromes. — The organization of DNA sequences in the P. sativum genome was determined by the reassociation kinetics of DNA fragments of varying length. Further information was derived from S1 nuclease resistance and from hyperchromicity measurements on DNA fragments reassociated to defined C0t values. — The portion of the genome organized in a short period interspersion pattern amounts to 47%, with the unique sequences on an average 1000 nucleotides long, and most of the repetitive sequences about 300 nucleotides in length, whereas the weight average length may be up to 600 nucleotides. — About 5% unique DNA and 11% slow intermediate repetitive DNA consist of sequences from 103 up to 104 nucleotides long; these are interspersed with repetitive sequences of unknown length. Long repetitive sequences constitute 33% of the genome, 13% are satellite-like organized, and 20% in long stretches of intermediate repetitive DNA in which highly divergent sequences alternate with sequences that show only minimal divergence. — The results presented indicate remarkable similarities with the genomes of most animal species on which information is available. The most intriguing pecularity of the plant genome derives from its high content of repetitive DNA and the presumed organization of the latter.  相似文献   

10.
The satellite II DNAs of the domestic ox Bos taurus and sheep Ovis aries have been sequenced, and that of the domestic goat Capra hircus partially sequenced. All three are related, and consist of repeat units of about 700 base-pairs. There is no evidence of internal repetition within these repeat units. When matched for maximum homology, the goat and sheep sequences show 83% homology, whereas the ox and sheep sequences share only 70% homology. Factors contributing to the uncertainty of the exact homology between these sequences are discussed, but the results are nevertheless consistent with their progenitor sequence being present in the common ancestor of cattle and sheep. Goat satellite II DNA is shown to contain another, unrelated, tandemly repeated sequence, which is composed of 22 base-pair repeat units. Both this sequence and a region of ox satellite II share good homology with the 11 base-pair progenitor sequence of ox 1.706 g/cm3 satellite DNA. It is suggested that this shared sequence could play a role in bovine satellite DNA amplification.  相似文献   

11.
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   

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DNA condensation with polyamines. II. Electron microscopic studies   总被引:24,自引:0,他引:24  
Approximately 75% of the wheat and rye genomes consist of repeated sequence DNA. Three-quarters of the non-repeated or few copy sequences in wheat are less than 1000 base-pairs long, whilst in rye approximately half of the non-repeated or few copy sequences are in this size class. Most of the remaining non-repeated or few copy sequences appear to be a few thousand base-pairs long.In this paper a somewhat novel approach has been used to quantitatively analyse the linear organisation of the large proportion of repeated sequence DNA as well as the non-repeated DNA in the wheat and rye genomes. Repeated sequences in the genomes of oats, barley, wheat and rye have been used as probes to distinguish and isolate four different groups of repeated sequences and their neighbouring sequences from the wheat and rye genomes. Radioactively labelled wheat or rye DNA fragments ranging from 200 to over 9000 nucleotides long were incubated separately with large excesses of denatured unlabelled oats, barley, wheat and rye DNAs to Cot values which enable all the repeated sequences of the unlabelled DNA to renature. The following parameters were then determined from the proportions of total labelled DNA in fragments which had at least partially renatured. (1) The proportions of the repeated sequences in the labelled DNAs that were able to hybridise to each unlabelled DNA; (2) the mean distance apart of the hybridising sequences on the longer labelled fragments; and (3) the proportion of the genome in which the hybridising sequences were concentrated. Analysis of these results, together with those of separate experiments designed to quantitatively estimate the nature of sequences unable to reanneal with the repeated sequences of each of the probe DNAs, have enabled schematic maps to be drawn which show how the repeated and non-repeated sequences are arranged in the wheat and rye genomes.Both genomes are constructed from millions of relatively short sequences, most of them considerably shorter than 3000 base-pairs. This structure was recognised because adjacent sequences can be distinguished by their frequency of repetition (i.e. repeated or non-repeated) or by their evolutionary origin. Approximately 40 to 45% of the wheat genome and 30 to 35% of the rye genome consists of short non-repeated sequences interspersed between short repeated sequences. Approximately 50% of the wheat genome and 60% of the rye genome consists of tandemly arranged repeated sequences of different evolutionary origins. It is postulated that much of this complex repeated sequence DNA could have arisen from amplification of compound sequences, each containing repeated and non-repeated sequence DNA.Short repeated sequences with a number average length of around 200 base-pairs and which occupy about 20% of the wheat and rye genomes are related to repeated sequences also found in oats and barley. They are concentrated in 60 to 70% of the wheat and rye genomes, being interspersed with different short repeated sequences and a significant proportion of the short non-repeated sequences.Rye chromosomes contain more DNA than wheat chromosomes. This is principally, but not entirely, due to additional repeated sequence DNA. Many quantitative changes appear to have occurred in both genomes, possibly affecting most families of repeated sequences, since wheat and rye diverged from a common ancestor. Both species contain species-specific repeated sequences (24% of rye genome; 16% of wheat genome) but a large proportion of these are closely interspersed with repeated sequences found in both genomes.  相似文献   

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Condensed and dispersed chromatin fractions were isolated from human placental nuclei. The DNA of each fraction was purified and characterised by isopycnic centrifugation, thermal fractionation on hydroxylapatite (HAP) and sequence complexity studies. The DNAs had identical buoyant densities in neutral CsCl (1.698 g/cm3) and similar melting profiles on HAP. Analytical ultracentrifugation in Ag+-Cs2SO4, however, showed that satellite DNAs were present in the condensed fraction DNA (DNAC) but were not visible in the dispersed fraction DNA (DNAD). In addition, DNAC was found to be enriched in highly reiterated sequences (20% reassociated by C0t 10?3) which can be correlated with the presence of satellite DNAs, whereas DNAD contained only 3% of these fast reassociating sequences. In contrast DNAD contained 30% intermediate sequences (reassociating between C0t 10?3 and C0t 100) which represent only 10% of DNAC. The reassociated highly repeated sequences of DNAC showed the presence of two components in both CsCl density gradients and HAP thermal elution studies. This suggests that either there are sequence relationships resulting in partial mismatching between the different highly repeated DNA sequences in this fraction, or that highly repeated sequences are associated with less repetitious DNA. The results are discussed in terms of possible differences in genetic activity between the chromatin fractions.  相似文献   

16.
Restriction site periodicities in highly repetitive DNA of primates.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Highly repeated DNA sequences from three Old World primate groups have been compared, using restriction endonucleases. Baboons, macaques and mangabeys share a 3404 base-pair, tandemly repeated DNA that is cut once by EndoR · BamHI. The several species of guenons, including the African green monkey, possess a related 170 base-pair, tandemly organized sequence distinguished by the feature of being cut once by EndoR · HindIII, EndoR · MboII or EndoR · HphI. The tandemly repeated DNA of the colobus monkey is based on a monomer length of 680 base-pairs, being cut once by EndoR · BamI or EndoR · EcoRI. Thus, all three highly repeated DNAs have a monomer length of 170n base-pairs, where n = 1, 2 or 4. The 340 and 680 base-pair repeated DNAs contain an internal 170 base-pair periodicity with respect especially to the EndoR · HindIII cleavage site, but with respect also to several other enzymes that characterize each repeated sequence. The 170 base-pair length is called the fundamental unit.The three repeated DNAs are more conserved in the region around the HindIII site and are more divergent elsewhere in the sequence. All seven 170 base-pair fundamental units were related to one another, judging from the overall similarities of the maps of restriction endonuclease cleavage sites. The highly repeated DNAs from baboons and guenons are related enough to cross-hybridize at relaxed criteria (60 °C in 0.12 m-Na+) but neither hybridizes to repeated colobus DNA under this condition.The results show that highly repeated sequences in primates form a common library descended from a single ancestral sequence, with 170 base-pairs making up the fundamental unit of library members. Occasionally, a member of the library is amplified, creating a newly amplified family. In Old World monkeys the most recent amplification just preceded active speciation.  相似文献   

17.
Nuclear DNA of rye (Secale cereale), a plant species with a relatively large genome (i.e., 18 pg diploid), has been characterized by determination of its content in repetitive sequences, buoyant density, and thermal denaturation properties. The reassociation kinetics of rye DNA reveals the presence of 70 to 75% repeated nucleotide sequences which are grouped into highly (Cot 1) and intermediately repetitive (Cot 1–100) fractions. On sedimentation in neutral CsCl gradients, native, high molecular weight DNA forms an almost symmetrical band of density 1.702 g/cm3. The highly repetitive DNA (Cot 1), on the other hand, is separated into two distinct peaks; the minor component has a density of 1.703 g/cm3 corresponding to that of a very rapidly reassociating fraction (Cot 0.01) which comprises 10 to 12% of the rye genome. The latter DNA contains segments which are repeated 6×105 to 6×106 times. The major peak of the Cot 1 fraction shows a density of 1.707 g/cm3 and consists of fragments repeated about 3.7×104 times. The intermediately repetitive DNA is much more heterogeneous than the Cot 1 fraction and has a low degree of repetition of the order of 8.5×102. The melting behavior of the Cot 1 fraction reveals the presence of a high degree of base pairing (i.e., 7% mismatching). When native rye DNA is resolved into fractions differing in GC content by hydroxyapatite thermal column chromatography and these fractions are analyzed for the presence of repetitive sequences, it is observed that the highly redundant DNA (Cot 1) is mostly located in the fraction denaturing between 80° and 90°C. This result suggests that highly repetitive rye DNA occurs in a portion of the genome which is neither very rich in AT nor in GC.  相似文献   

18.
The arrangement of the reiterated DNA sequences complementary to transfer RNA has been studied in Xenopus laevis. Prehybridization of denatured DNA with an excess of unfractionated tRNA results in a small but well-defined increase in the buoyant density of fragments which contain sequences homologous to tRNA. The density increase is smaller than that found for 5 S DNA, but is the same or nearly so for all tRNA coding sequences examined. These results indicate that the majority of tRNA genes are clustered together with spacer DNA, the average size of which is estimated to be approximately 0.5 × 106 daltons (native) DNA.In high molecular weight native DNA preparations, the sequences homologous to unfractionated tRNA, tRNAVal, tRNA1Met and tRNA2Met band in CsCl at 1.707, 1.702, 1.708 and 1.711 g cm?3, respectively. The mean buoyant densities are constant at all molecular weights examined but they do not correspond to the base compositions of the complementary tRNA species. These results indicate that isocoding genes are linked to spacer DNA in separate and extensive gene clusters, and that the different clusters contain different spacer DNA sequences. These clusters form well-defined cryptic DNA satellites which are potentially separable from each other as well as from other chromosomal DNA.  相似文献   

19.
The cloning and characterization of the cytoplasmic 7 S RNAs of HeLa cells has provided pure probes to study the organization of the corresponding genomic DNA sequences. Such analysis has shown that the 7 S L and K RNAs are derived from families of middle repetitive DNA (Ullu & Melli, 1982; Ullu et al., 1982). In this work we analyze the evolutionary conservation of these sequences in the RNA and DNA of distantly related species. Hybridization of the 7 S recombinants to the RNA of rodents, birds, amphibians and echinoderms suggests high conservation of these sequences throughout evolution. Southern blot analysis of genomic DNAs from the same species shows the presence of families of repeated sequences homologous to the 7 S recombinants and Alu DNAs in the genomes of the same species. We were unable to hybridize the 7 S probes to the RNAs of Drosophila melanogaster or Dictyostelium discoideum, although sequence(s) homologous to the 7 S L probe were found in the genome of D. discoideum and to both 7 S L and K probes in the genome of D. melanogaster.  相似文献   

20.
The presence of repeated DNA (short tandemly repeated repetitive [STRR] and long tandemly repeated repetitive [LTRR]) sequences in the genome of cyanobacteria was used to generate a fingerprint method for symbiotic and free-living isolates. Primers corresponding to the STRR and LTRR sequences were used in the PCR, resulting in a method which generate specific fingerprints for individual isolates. The method was useful both with purified DNA and with intact cyanobacterial filaments or cells as templates for the PCR. Twenty-three Nostoc isolates from a total of 35 were symbiotic isolates from the angiosperm Gunnera species, including isolates from the same Gunnera species as well as from different species. The results show a genetic similarity among isolates from different Gunnera species as well as a genetic heterogeneity among isolates from the same Gunnera species. Isolates which have been postulated to be closely related or identical revealed similar results by the PCR method, indicating that the technique is useful for clustering of even closely related strains. The method was applied to nonheterocystus cyanobacteria from which a fingerprint pattern was obtained.  相似文献   

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