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1.
Numerous flanking nucleotide sequences from two primate interspersed repetitive DNA families have been aligned to determine the integration site preferences of each repetitive family. This analysis indicates that both the human Alu and galago Monomer families were preferentially inserted into short d(A+T)-rich regions. Moreover, both primate repeat families demonstrated an orientation specific integration with respect to dA-rich sequences within the flanking direct repeats. These observations suggest that a common mechanism exists for the insertion of many repetitive DNA families into new genomic sites. A modified mechanism for site-specific integration of primate repetitive DNA sequences is provided which requires insertion into dA-rich sequences in the genome. This model is consistent with the observed relationship between galago Type II subfamilies suggesting that they have arisen not by mere mutation but by independent integration events.  相似文献   

2.
Sequence organization of the human genome   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The organization of three sequence classes—single copy, repetitive, and inverted repeated sequences—within the human genome has been studied by renaturation techniques, hydroxylapatite binding methods, and DNA hyperchromism. Repetitive sequence classes are distributed throughout 80% or more of the genome. Slightly more than half of the genome consists of short single copy sequences, with a length of about 2 kb interspersed with repetitive sequences. The average length of the repetitive sequences is also small and approximates the length of these sequences found in other organisms. The sequence organization of the human genome therefore resembles the sequence organization found in Xenopus and sea urchin. The inverted repeats are essentially randomly positioned with respect to both sequence class and sequence arrangement, so that all three sequence classes are found to be mutually interspersed in a portion of the genome.  相似文献   

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5.
The dominant family of interspersed repetitive DNA sequences in the human genome has been termed the Alu family. We have found that more than 75% of the lambda phage in a recombinant library representing an African green monkey genome hybridize with a human Alu sequence under stringent conditions. A group of clones selected from the monkey library with probes other than the Alu sequence were analyzed for the presence and distribution of Alu family sequences. The analyses confirm the abundance of Alu sequences and demonstrate that more than one repeat unit is present in some phages. In the clones studied, the Alu units are separated by an average of 8 kilobase pairs of unrelated sequences. The nucleotide sequence of one monkey Alu sequence is reported and shown to resemble the human Alu sequences closely. Hence, the sequence, dispersion pattern, and copy number of the Alu family members are very similar in the African green monkey and human genomes. Among the clones investigated were two that contain segments of the satellite DNA term alpha-component joined to non alpha-component DNA. The experiments indicate that in the monkey genome Alu sequences can occur close to regions of alpha-component DNA.  相似文献   

6.
Nucleotide sequence organization in the genome of maize has been studied using renaturation kinetics of DNA and S-1 nuclease digestion of the renatured products. Approximately 40% of the genome consists of single copy sequences, and 15% of these sequences are interspersed between repeated sequences and are approximately 1100 nucleotide pairs long. About 54% of the genome consists of repeated sequences. Six per cent of the genome consists of foldback sequences. These sequences are distributed through at least 44% of the genome. It was found using renaturation kinetics that the sum of foldback and highly repeated DNA fractions of Dobrudzhanko maize and inbred lines differ in the amount of DNA composing the fractions. Comparison of the DNA of the Dobrudzhanko maize and inbred lines by the method of DNA-DNA hybridization indicates strong differences in the amount of polynucleotide homologies between the Dobrudzhanko maize and the D1 inbred line on one hand and the A619 inbred line on the other hand.  相似文献   

7.
The nucleotide sequence of the beta globin gene cluster of the prosimian Galago crassicaudatus has been determined. A total sequence spanning 41,101 bp contains and links together previously published sequences of the five galago beta-like globin genes (5'-epsilon-gamma-psi eta-delta-beta-3'). A computer-aided search for middle interspersed repetitive sequences identified 10 LINE (L1) elements, including a 5' truncated repeat that is orthologous to the full-length L1 element found in the human epsilon-gamma intergenic region. SINE elements that were identified included one Alu type I repeat, four Alu type II repeats, and two methionine tRNA-derived Monomer (type III) elements. Alu type II and Monomer sequences are unique to the galago genome. Structural analyses of the cluster sequence reveals that it is relatively A+T rich (about 62%) and regions with high G+C content are associated primarily with globin coding regions. Comparative analyses with the beta globin cluster sequences of human, rabbit, and mouse reveal extensive sequence homologies in their genic regions, but only human, galago, and rabbit sequences share extensive intergenic sequence homologies. Divergence analyses of aligned intergenic and flanking sequences from orthologous human, galago, and rabbit sequences show a gradation in the rate of nucleotide sequence evolution along the cluster where sequences 5' of the epsilon globin gene region show the least sequence divergence and sequences just 5' of the beta globin gene region show the greatest sequence divergence.  相似文献   

8.
Analysis of rat repetitive DNA sequences.   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Parameters of repetitive sequence organization have been measured in the rat genome. Experiments using melting, hydroxylapatite binding, and single strand specific nuclease digestion have been used to measure the number, length, and arrangement of repeated DNA sequences. Renaturation and melting or S1 nuclease digestion of 1.0 kbp DNA fragment show about 20% of rat DNA sequences are 3000-fold repeated. Renatured duplexes from 4.0 kbp DNA fragments display two repetitive size fractions after nuclease digestion. About 60% of the repeated sequences are 0.2-0.4 kbp long while the remainder are longer than 1.5 kbp. The arrangement of the repeated sequences has been measured by hydroxylapatite fractionation of DNA fragments of varying lengths bearing a repeated sequence. Repeated DNA sequences are interspersed among 2.5 kbp long nonrepeated sequences throughout more than 70% of the rat genome. There are approximately 350 different 3000-fold short repeated sequences in the rat interspersed among 600,000 nonrepeated DNA sequences.  相似文献   

9.
The arrangements of inverted-repeated and repeated DNA sequences in the human genome have been investigated by an electron microscope method. The arrangement of the interspersed repeated DNA sequences is found to be similar to the corresponding arrangement found in Xenopus. This arrangement consists of 300-nucleotide-long repeated DNA sequences interspersed with roughly gene-size single-copy DNA sequences. The inverted-repeated sequences are also 300 nucleotides in length and are interspersed with the other DNA sequence classes.Most inverted-repeated sequences (64%) are spaced by another sequence which is recognized by electron microscopy as a single-stranded loop in a hairpin structure. The average length of this spacer loop is 1.6 kilobases. Although some pairs of inverted-repeated sequences are clustered, most seem to be randomly distributed throughout the genome. The average distance separating two pairs of inverted-repeated sequences is 10 to 20 kilobases. The interspersed repeated sequences and inverted-repeated sequences are arranged simultaneously in a portion of the human genome resulting in an interspersion of all three sequence classes.  相似文献   

10.
Cot analysis shows that the haploid Drosophila genome contains 12% rapidly reassociating, highly reiterated DNA, 12% middle repetitive DNA with an average reiteration frequency of 70, and 70% single-copy DNA. The distribution of the middle repetitive sequences in the genome has been studied by an examination in the electron microscope of the structures obtained when middle repetitive sequences present on large DNA strands reassociate and by the hydroxyapatite binding methods developed by Davidson et al. (1973). At least one third by weight of the middle repetitive sequences are interspersed in single-copy sequences. These interspersed middle repetitive sequences have a fairly uniform distribution of lengths from less than 0.5 to 13 kb, with a number average value of 5.6 kb. The average distance between middle repetitive sequences is greater than 13 kb. The data do not exclude the possibility that essentially all of the middle repetitive sequences have the interspersion pattern described above; however, it is possible that some of the middle repetitive sequences of Drosophila are clustered in stretches of length much greater than 13 kb. The interspersion pattern of the middle repetitive sequences in Drosophila is quite different from that which occurs in the sea urchin, in Xenopus, in rat, and probably many other higher eucaryotes.  相似文献   

11.
Two recombinant plasmids, M4 and KH10, carrying Dictyostelium DNA inserted into the Eco RI restriction endonuclease site of pMB9 by poly(dA)-poly(dT) tailing, were selected for study because they are complementary to abundant mRNA populations from Dictyostelium. Both plasmids have been shown to hybridize a heterogeneous size class of mRNAs which, in the case of KH10, comprise 5-10% of the pulse-labeled poly(A)+ RNA from vegetative cells. Analysis of the sequence organization of the two pieces of Dictyostelium DNA shows that they consist mostly of single-copy sequences with a short DNA sequence which is repeated in the genome and interspersed with single-copy DNA. These and other results suggest that the majority of the hybridization of pulse-labeled mRNA to M4 and KH10 is to the short "repeated" DNA sequences. In the genome, members of these repeat families appear to be transcribed onto a population of different single-copy mRNAs. Additional results show that M4 DNA contains a sequence which is entirely complementary to a discrete mRNA.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Galago DNA contains a few single copy sequences that are homologous to the human THE 1 family of repeats. Two of these galago loci have been isolated as genomic clones and their structures are compared to the THE 1 consensus sequence. Whereas the human sequence resembles a proretroviral transposon, the galago sequences provide no evidence for a proretroviral sequence organization. The two galago clones share a common repeat sequence, which is homologous to the U5 region of the THE 1 long terminal repeat. Immediately 3 to this repeat, each galago clone contains sequences that are homologous to mutually exclusive regions of the internal THE 1 sequence. Thus, the human THE 1 sequence can be represented as a mosaic of the two ancestrally related galago loci. The galago loci are transcribed in vivo, so that their conservation in the primate genome could be selected. Human THE 1 repeats apparently resulted by recruiting preexisting cellular sequences via a retrovirally mediated process.  相似文献   

13.
Three different members of a family (KpnI-family) of interspersed repeated DNA sequences were found linked to alpha-satellite sequences in cloned segments of the African green monkey genome. In two of these segments the KpnI-family member is over 6 kbp in length and one of them is flanked by alpha-satellite on both sides indicating that it was inserted into a satellite array. Hybridization of subcloned portions of the family members to restriction endonuclease digests of monkey and human DNA and to a genomic library of African green monkey DNA indicate that 1) family members are interspersed in both the monkey and human genomes, 2) some family members may include sequences in addition to those in the three characterized here, 3) some family members may contain only parts of the sequences characterized here and 4) while the overall organization of the family is similar in the human and monkey genome the majority of the family members in each of the two genomes are distinctly identified by the variant position of certain restriction endonuclease sites. This last observation suggests that within each genome there is a tendency to maintain particular versions of the sequence. Observations 2) and 3) suggest that the KpnI family is complex and includes a variety of subfamilies.  相似文献   

14.
The genome of Thiobacillus ferrooxidans ATCC 19859 is about 2.8 X 10(6) base pairs as determined by analysis of reassociation kinetics of sheared DNA. This is 70% of the size of the genome of Escherichia coli. About 6% of the genome of T. ferrooxidans consists of moderately repetitive DNA sequences that are repeated an average of 20 times per genome. Two distinct repeated sequences, designated family 1 and family 2, have been analyzed in more detail. Both families are approximately 1 kilobase in length and are repeated 20 to 30 times per genome. Preliminary evidence from restriction enzyme analysis, Southern blotting experiments, and thermal melting analysis indicates that members of both families are conserved and are interspersed with single-copy DNA. Six copies of one family are present on the 45-kilobase-pair plasmid of strain ATCC 19859.  相似文献   

15.
A 3.1-kb intergenic DNA fragment located between the psi beta-globin and delta-globin genes in the beta-globin gene cluster was cloned from gorilla, orangutan, rhesus monkey, and spider monkey, and the nucleotide sequence of each fragment was determined. The phylogeny of these four sequences, together with two previously published allelic sequences from humans and one from chimpanzee, was constructed, and the accumulation of mutations in the region was analyzed. The sites of base substitutions are not evenly distributed within the region: two Alu repeats have accumulated 0.21 + 0.02 substitutions/site with 0.15 + 0.008 substitutions/site in the remainder of the fragment. The occurrence of substitutions at neighboring sites is more frequent than would be expected if they were independent. The observed excesses disappear when ancestral -CG- dinucleotide sites are excluded. The phylogenetic relationships of the sequences indicate that the human sequence shares a most recent coancestor with the chimpanzee sequence. The data also show that great apes have accumulated fewer mutations in this part of the genome than has the rhesus monkey. The relative rates of accumulation of 12 kinds of nucleotide substitution in the region during primate evolution are asymmetric in the DNA strands. From these rates of accumulation, the origin of a simple stretch of sequence near the 3' end of the 3.1-kb fragment was deduced to be a sequence comprising 50% T and 50% C on one strand. The two oppositely oriented Alu sequences in the 3.1-kb region were inserted at their present positions before the divergence of the New-World monkeys from other lineages. Our analysis shows that the nucleotide sequences of the two Alu repeats in spider monkey are unexpectedly similar both to each other and to the deduced ancestral sequence of Alu repeats. The data suggest that there has been some type of recombinational event between the spider monkey Alu repeats but that it was not a simple gene conversion.   相似文献   

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17.
A THE-1 sequence in intron 7 of the human dystrophin gene has been found to represent a new subfamily of THE-1 elements. The sequence is closely related to the MstII family of repetitive sequences and is more like single-copy sequences found in the galago genome than any other THE-1 sequence previously reported. This new THE-1 sequence has been compared with two other complete THE-1 sequences and three related long-terminal repeat elements that we have previously found in intron 7 of the dystrophin gene, and with members of the same family from elsewhere in the primate genome. Parsimony and deletion analysis show that the cluster of THE-1 sequences in intron 7 of the dystrophin gene has arisen from at least three individual insertion events, rather than from the insertion and duplication of a single progenitor sequence. Correspondence to: G.B. Petersen  相似文献   

18.
The pattern of DNA sequence organization in the genome of Cycas revoluta was analyzed by DNA/DNA reassociation. Reassociation of 400 base pair (bp) fragments to various C0t values indicates the presence of at least four kinetic classes: the foldback plus very highly repetitive sequences (15%), the fast repeats (24%), the slow repeats (44%), and the single copy (17%). The latter component reassociates with a rate constant 1×10–4 M–1S–1 corresponding to a complexity of 1.6× 106 kb per haploid genome. A haploid C. revoluta nucleus contains approximately 10.3 pg DNA. The single-copy sequences account for about 28% of the DNA, but only 17% reassociate with single-copy kinetics because of interspersion with repetitive sequences. — The interspersion of repetitive and single-copy sequences was examined by reassociation of DNA fragments of varying length to C0t values of 70 and 500. A major (65%) and homogeneous class of single-copy sequences averaging 1,100 bp in length is interspersed in a short period pattern with repeated sequences. A minor (35%) heterogeneous single-copy component is interspersed in a long-period pattern. The majority of repetitive sequences have a length distribution of 100–350 bp with subclasses averaging 150 and 300 bp in length. Repeat sequences with a wide range in sizes exceeding 2 kilobase pair (kb) are also present in this genome. — The size and distribution of inverted repeat (ir) sequences in the DNA of C. revoluta were studied by electron microscopy. It is estimated that there are approximately 4 × 106 ir pairs (one per 2.33 kb) that form almost equal numbers of looped and unlooped palindromes. This high value is 2.5 times that found in wheat DNA. These palindromes are in general randomly distributed in the genome with an average interpalindrome distance of 1.6 kb. The majority (about 85%) of ir sequences of both types of palindromes belong to a main-size class, with an average length of 210 bp in the unlooped and and 163 bp in the looped type. These values are comparable to those reported for some other plant and animal genomes. Distribution of length of single stranded loops showed a main-size class (75%) with an average length of 220 bp.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The major families of repeated DNA sequences in the genome of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) were isolated from a sheared DNA library. One thousand clones, representing one million base pairs, or 0.15% of the genome, were surveyed for repeated DNA sequences by hybridization to total nuclear DNA. Four major repeat classes were identified and characterized with respect to copy number, chromosomal localization by in situ hybridization, and evolution in the family Solanaceae. The most highly repeated sequence, with approximately 77000 copies, consists of a 162 bp tandemly repeated satellite DNA. This repeat is clustered at or near the telomeres of most chromosomes and also at the centromeres and interstitial sites of a few chromosomes. Another family of tandemly repeated sequences consists of the genes coding for the 45 S ribosomal RNA. The 9.1 kb repeating unit in L. esculentum was estimated to be present in approximately 2300 copies. The single locus, previously mapped using restriction fragment length polymorphisms, was shown by in situ hybridization as a very intense signal at the end of chromosome 2. The third family of repeated sequences was interspersed throughout nearly all chromosomes with an average of 133 kb between elements. The total copy number in the genome is approximately 4200. The fourth class consists of another interspersed repeat showing clustering at or near the centromeres in several chromosomes. This repeat had a copy number of approximately 2100. Sequences homologous to the 45 S ribosomal DNA showed cross-hybridization to DNA from all solanaceous species examined including potato, Datura, Petunia, tobacco and pepper. In contrast, with the exception of one class of interspersed repeats which is present in potato, all other repetitive sequences appear to be limited to the crossing-range of tomato. These results, along with those from a companion paper (Zamir and Tanksley 1988), indicate that tomato possesses few highly repetitive DNA sequences and those that do exist are evolving at a rate higher than most other genomic sequences.  相似文献   

20.
J Sainz  E Prats  S Ruiz  L Cornudella 《Biochimie》1992,74(12):1067-1074
The abundance of repetitive DNA in the haploid sea cucumber genome has been determined by screening a Holothuria genomic DNA library for clones containing repeated sequences using reverse genome hybridization. Analysis by in situ plaque hybridization of a set of 1132 clones has revealed the presence of repetitive DNA sequences in about 38.1% of the clones screened. The distribution of the reiterated DNA has been further analyzed by restriction endonuclease digestion of seven randomly selected repetitive clones. The repeated sequences have a fairly uniform distribution of lengths with an average length value of 7.3 kb. Analysis of the measurements suggests that the repetitive sequences are interspersed among longer single copy sequences with an average spacing interval of about 47.3 kb indicating that the repetitive and single copy DNA in the Holothuria genome are arranged in a long-period interspersion pattern.  相似文献   

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