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1.
1. 340 bp (dimer) and 680 bp (tetramer) fractions of the human alphoid satellite DNA (h alpha RI DNA) were isolated after complete cleavage of total human DNA with EcoR I and cloned in pBR 32.5. 2. Ten clones containing 340 bp inserts and one clone containing 680 bp insert were sequenced in order to investigate the sequence heterogeneity of this satellite DNA and the sequence data were compared with the consensus h alpha RI DNA sequence of Wu and Manuelidis (1980). 3. It was shown that in all clones studied the mutations are nonrandomly distributed along the human alphoid monomers forming distinct conservative and variable regions. 4. This mutation distribution pattern was compared with the nucleotide variations between the consensus sequences of different primate alphoid DNAs and it was found that the interspecies nucleotide divergency of this satellite DNA is quite similar to the intragenomic one. 5. The sequenced h alpha RI DNA clones were used for preparation of DNA-DNA hybrids with a known percentage of base pair mismatching. 6. These hybrids were melted on hydroxyapatite (HAP) and the results obtained were used to determine the relationship between the thermal stability (Tm) and the extent of base pair mismatching for naturally diverged DNA sequences. 7. A value of 0.7 degrees C decrease in Tm per 1% base pair mismatching was found.  相似文献   

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3.
Sequence heterogeneity within the human alphoid repetitive DNA family.   总被引:19,自引:4,他引:15       下载免费PDF全文
We have cloned and determined the base-sequence and genome organization of two human chromosome-specific alphoid DNA fragments, designated L1.26, mapping principally to chromosomes 13 and 21, and L1.84, mapping to chromosome 18. Their copy number is estimated to be approximately 2,000 per haploid genome. L1.84 has a double-dimer organization, whereas L1.26 has a much less defined higher order tandem organization. Further, we present evidence that the restriction-site spacing within the alphoid DNA family is chromosome specific. From sequence analysis, clones L1.26 and L1.84 are found to consist of 5 and 4 tandemly duplicated 170 bp monomers. Cross-homology between the various monomers is 65-85%. The analysis suggests that the evolution of tandem-arrays does not take place via a defined 340 bp unit, as was inferred by others, but via circularly permutated monomers or multimers of the 170 bp unit.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Summary Analysis of rhesus monkey alphoid DNA suggests that it arose by tandem duplication of an ancestral monomer unit followed by independent variation within two adjacent monomers (one becoming more divergent than the other) before their amplification as a dimer unit to produce tandem arrays. The rhesus monkey alphoid DNA is a tandemly repeated, 343-bp dimer; the consensus dimer is over 98% homologous to the alphoid dimers reported for baboon and bonnet monkey, 81% homologous to the African green monkey alpha monomer, and less than 70% homologous to the more divergent human alphoid DNAs. The consensus dimer consists of two wings (I and II, 172 and 171 bp, respectively) that are only 70% homologous to each other, but share seven regions of exact homology. These same regions are highly conserved among the consensus sequences of the other cercopithecid alphoid DNAs. The three alpha-protein binding sites reported for African green monkey alpha DNA by F. Strauss and A. Varshavsky (Cell 37: 889–901, 1984) occur in wings I and II, but with one site altered in wing I. Two cloned dimer segments are 98% homologous to the consensus, each containing 8 single-base-pair differences within the 343-bp segment. Surprisingly, 37% of these differences occur in regions that are evolutionarily conserved in the alphoid consensus sequences, including the alpha-protein binding sites. Sequence variation in this highly repetitive DNA family may produce unique nucleosomal architectures for different members of an alphoid array. These unique architectures may modulate the evolution of these repetitive DNAs and may produce unique centromeric characteristics in primate chromosomes.  相似文献   

6.
A computer analysis of human and primate alphoid DNA was performed. The number and localization of short inverted complete repeats within alphoid DNA dimers (but not monomers) remain conserved. Thus, in spite of high heterogeneity of the primary structure the conserved secondary structure of alphoid DNA might be functionally important. The analysis of internal periodicity of the monomeric sequences of human and primate alphoid DNA revealed its potential ancient sequence, that is a simple satellite DNA with a reiterated heptanucleotide TGAAAAA, which is suggested to be the ancestor of satellite DNase of rodents. The facts reported propose the ancient origin and possible functional role of alphoid-like DNA as a universal pericentromeric superfamily of DNA.  相似文献   

7.
Chromosomal location of the cloned fragment pHS05 of alphoid DNA from the collection of human PstI restricts has been studied in 38 individuals by in situ hybridization. Pericentromeric localization of the DNA fraction studied was found in practically all chromosomes of the set. Significant interchromosomal and poorly expressed interindividual differences were detected in a number of the copies of the sequence class investigated. The majority of the label (approx. 27%) was observed over the pericentromeric region of chromosome 3. No relationship was discovered between hybridization results and the pattern of Q-polymorphism.  相似文献   

8.
Alphoid and satellite III sequences are arranged as large tandem arrays in the centromeric regions of human chromosomes. Several recent studies using in situ hybridisation to investigate the relative positions of these sequences have shown that they occupy adjacent but non-overlapping domains in metaphase chromosomes. We have analysed the DNA sequence at the junction between alphoid and satellite III sequences in a cosmid previously mapped to chromosome 10. The alphoid sequence consists of tandemly arranged dimers which are distinct from the known chromosome 10-specific alphoid family. Polymerase chain reaction experiments confirm the integrity of the sequence data. These results, together with pulsed field gel electrophoresis data place the boundary between alphoid and satellite III sequences in the mapping interval 10 centromere-10q11.2. The sequence data shows that these repetitive sequences are separated by a partial L1 interspersed repeat sequence less than 500bp in length. The arrangement of the junction suggests that a recombination event has brought these sequences into close proximity.  相似文献   

9.
The sequence organization of cloned segments of Human DNA carrying unusual domains of alphoid satellite was studied by restriction mapping, electron microscopy and base sequence analysis. In some cases restriction mapping revealed the absence of the typical 340 bp EcoR 1 dimer, although blot hybridizations showed the extensive presence of alphoid satellite. A variant monomeric construction was demonstrated by DNA sequencing. Furthermore, inverted repeats within these domains were detected by electron microscopy. In one case these were shown to be the result of interruptions in the satellite sequence by members of a family of repetitive, conserved elements.  相似文献   

10.
The nucleotide sequence of members of an alpha-repeat subfamily shared by human chromosomes 14 and 22 is presented. This subfamily is organized into a higher-order repeat unit composed of a tandem repetition of an ordered array of four related but distinct 340-bp repeat dimers. An analogous situation has been described for a related but distinct subfamily shared by chromosomes 13 and 21. These two subfamilies were further shown not to be present on the homologous chimpanzee chromosomes and therefore must have arisen by rearrangement of the human genome after separation of the two species. The sequence homology between the 13/21 and the 14/22 subfamilies is about 85%. The 14/22 subfamily represents the only major alphoid DNA species on these two chromosomes and is not present elsewhere in the human genome. Fluorescent in situ hybridizations show that sequences from the 13/21 and 14/22 subfamilies can be used as specific markers for their respective chromosomes.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The alphoid repeat DNA on chimpanzee chromosome 22 was compared with alphoid repeat DNA on its human homologue, chromosome 21. Hybridization of different alphoid probes under various conditions of stringency show that the alphoid repeats of chimpanzee chromosome 22 are not closely related to those of human chromosome 21. Sequence analysis of cloned dimer and tetramer EcoRI fragments from chimpanzee chromosome 22 confirm the low overall level of homology, but reveal the presence of several nucleotide changes which are exclusive to the chromosome 21 subfamily of human alphoid DNA. Southern blot analysis of alphoid repeat DNA on the chimpanzee X chromosome suggests this subfamily has been strongly conserved during and since the separation of chimpanzee and man although the two subfamilies can be distinguished on the basis of Taq I restriction fragments.  相似文献   

13.
From the library of cloned fragments of human DNA we have isolated two recombinant plasmids containing alphoid DNA sequences pBRHS13, pBRHS65. Both cloned sequences hybridized in situ predominantly to pericentromeric regions of chromosome 18 and with less intensity to pericentromeric regions of chromosomes 2, 9, 20, and were characterized by populational copy number polymorphism in homologous chromosomes. These sequences may appear very useful in the diagnostics and cytogenetic analysis of chromosomal aberrations and in studies of polymorphisms of heterochromatic regions of human chromosomes.  相似文献   

14.
Centromere protein (CENP) B boxes, recognition sequences of CENP-B, appear at regular intervals in human centromeric alpha-satellite DNA (alphoid DNA). In this study, to determine whether information carried by the primary sequence of alphoid DNA is involved in assembly of functional human centromeres, we created four kinds of synthetic repetitive sequences: modified alphoid DNA with point mutations in all CENP-B boxes, resulting in loss of all CENP-B binding activity; unmodified alphoid DNA containing functional CENP-B boxes; and nonalphoid repetitive DNA sequences with or without functional CENP-B boxes. These four synthetic repetitive DNAs were introduced into cultured human cells (HT1080), and de novo centromere assembly was assessed using the mammalian artificial chromosome (MAC) formation assay. We found that both the CENP-B box and the alphoid DNA sequence are required for de novo MAC formation and assembly of functional centromere components such as CENP-A, CENP-C, and CENP-E. Using the chromatin immunoprecipitation assay, we found that direct assembly of CENP-A and CENP-B in cells with synthetic alphoid DNA required functional CENP-B boxes. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first reported evidence of a functional molecular link between a centromere-specific DNA sequence and centromeric chromatin assembly in humans.  相似文献   

15.
We have cloned and characterized two distinct types of alphoid DNA elements. Probe pG-Xba 11/340 was obtained by random cloning of human satellite DNA and contains two basic units with overall 88% homology to the 171-bp consensus alphoid sequence. pG-Xba 11/340-like elements are represented about 2,000-4,000 times in the haploid genome and, by in situ hybridization, are found exclusively at the primary constrictions of chromosomes 4 and 9. Probe pG-A16 was cloned from a chromosome 19-specific cosmid library and represents a 2.25-kb higher-order DNA element which is present at roughly 75-150 copies per haploid genome and which hybridizes to the centromeres of chromosomes 5 and 19. Using the pG-A16 probe, further genetic and physical dissection of the central area of chromosome 19 can be envisaged.  相似文献   

16.
The human alpha satellite DNA family is composed of diverse, tandemly reiterated monomer units of approximately 171 basepairs localized to the centromeric region of each chromosome. These sequences are organized in a highly chromosome-specific manner with many, if not all human chromosomes being characterized by individually distinct alphoid subsets. Here, we compare the nucleotide sequences of 153 monomer units, representing alphoid components of at least 12 different human chromosomes. Based on the analysis of sequence variation at each position within the 171 basepair monomer, we have derived a consensus sequence for the monomer unit of human alpha satellite DNA which we suggest may reflect the monomer sequence from which different chromosomal subsets have evolved. Sequence heterogeneity is evident at each position within the consensus monomer unit and there are no positions of strict nucleotide sequence conservation, although some regions are more variable than others. A substantial proportion of the overall sequence variation may be accounted for by nucleotide changes which are characteristic of monomer components of individual chromosomal subsets or groups of subsets which have a common evolutionary history.  相似文献   

17.
We isolated an alpha satellite DNA clone (pC1.8), 17 kb long, which is composed exclusively of tandemly repeated 340-bp EcoRI fragments. Hybridization studies using 37 random EcoRI dimers subcloned from pC1.8 showed that they are heterogeneous. The sequence of 5 dimers, 3 of them adjacent, confirmed this observation and showed that the heterogeneity is more accentuated among the second monomers. The chromosomal assignment under high stringency conditions showed that this alphoid subset is located on chromosomes 1, 5, and 19. No conditions that eliminate the hybridization on any one of those chromosomes were found. This suggests that, in contrast to many other chromosome-specific alpha satellite subsets, the single chromosome subsets of this family are virtually indistinguishable by hybridization techniques.  相似文献   

18.
Heterochromatic regions of chromosomes contain highly repetitive, tandemly arranged DNA sequences that undergo very rapid variation compared to unique DNA sequences that are predominantly conserved. In this study the chromosomal basis of speciation has been looked at in terms of repeat sequences. We have hybridized twenty-one chromosome-specific human alphoid satellite DNA probes to metaphase spreads of the chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes), gorilla (Gorilla gorilla), and orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) to investigate the evolutionary relationship of heterochromatic regions among such hominoid species. The majority of the probes did not hybridize to their corresponding equivalent chromosome but presented hybridization signals on non-corresponding chromosomes. Such observations suggest that rapid changes may have occurred in the ancestral alphoid satellite DNA sequence, resulting in divergence among the great ape species. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

19.
Definition of a second dimeric subfamily of human alpha satellite DNA   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
We describe a new human subfamily of alpha satellite DNA. The restriction endonuclease XbaI cleaves this subfamily into a collection of fragments which are heterogeneous with respect to size. We compared the sequences of 6 clones from four different XbaI size classes. Clones from a single size class were not necessarily more related than clones from different classes. Clones from different size classes were found to produce almost identical hybridization patterns with XbaI-digested human genomic DNA. All clones were found to share a common dimeric repeat organization, with dimers exhibiting about 84% sequence identities, indicating that the clones evolved from a common progenitor alphoid dimer. We show that this subfamily, and the EcoRI dimer subfamily originally described by Wu and Manuelidis, evolved from different progenitor alphoid dimers, and therefore represent distinct human alphoid subfamilies.  相似文献   

20.
We investigated relationships among alpha satellite DNA families in the human, gorilla, chimpanzee, and orangutan genomes by filter hybridization with cloned probes which correspond to chromosome-specific alpha satellite DNAs from at least 12 different human chromosomes. These include representatives of both the dimer-based and pentamer-based subfamilies, the two major subfamilies of human alpha satellite. In addition, we evaluated several high-copy dimer-based probes isolated from gorilla genomic DNA. Under low stringency conditions, all human probes tested hybridized extensively with gorilla and chimpanzee alpha satellite sequences. However, only pentameric and other non-dimeric human alphoid probes hybridized with orangutan alpha satellite sequences; probes belonging to the dimer subfamily did not cross-hybridize detectably with orangutan DNA. Moreover, under high stringency conditions, each of the human probes hybridized extensively only with human genomic DNA; none of the probes cross-hybridized effectively with other primate DNAs. Dimer-based gorilla alpha satellite probes hybridized with human and chimpanzee, but not orangutan, sequences under low stringency hybridization conditions, yet were specific for gorilla DNA under high stringency conditions. These results indicate that the alpha satellite DNA family has evolved in a concerted manner, such that considerable sequence divergence is now evident among the alphoid sequences of closely related primate species.  相似文献   

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