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1.
2.
Summary EcoRI monomers of a highly repetitive DNA family of Beta vulgaris have been cloned. Sequence analysis revealed that the repeat length varies between 157–160 bp. The percentage of AT-residues is 62% on average. The basic repeat does not show significant homology to the BamHI sequence family of B. vulgaris that was analyzed by us earlier. Both the EcoRI and BamHI sequences are investigated and compared to each other with respect to their genomic organization in the genus Beta. Both repeats were found to be tandemly arranged in the genome of B. vulgaris in a satellite-like manner. The EcoRI satellite DNA is present in three sections (Beta, Corollinae and Nanae) of the genus, whereas the BamHI satellite DNA exists only in the section Beta. The distribution of the EcoRI and BamHI satellite families in the genus is discussed with respect to their evolution.  相似文献   

3.
A family of repetitive DNA elements of approximately 350 bp—Sat350—that are members of Toxoplasma gondii satellite DNA was further analyzed. Sequence analysis identified at least three distinct repeat types within this family, called types A, B, and C. B repeats were divided into the subtypes B1 and B2. A search for internal repetitions within this family permitted the identification of conserved regions and the design of PCR primers that amplify almost all these repetitive elements. These primers amplified the expected 350-bp repeats and a novel 680-bp repetitive element (Sat680) related to this family. Two additional tandemly repeated high-order structures corresponding to this satellite DNA family were found by searching the Toxoplasma genome database with these sequences. These studies were confirmed by sequence analysis and identified: (1) an arrangement of AB1CB2 350-bp repeats and (2) an arrangement of two 350-bp-like repeats, resulting in a 680-bp monomer. Sequence comparison and phylogenetic analysis indicated that both high-order structures may have originated from the same ancestral 350-bp repeat. PCR amplification, sequence analysis and Southern blot showed that similar high-order structures were also found in the Toxoplasma-sister taxon Neospora caninum. The Toxoplasma genome database ( ) permitted the assembly of a contig harboring Sat350 elements at one end and a long nonrepetitive DNA sequence flanking this satellite DNA. The region bordering the Sat350 repeats contained two differentially expressed sequence-related regions and interstitial telomeric sequences.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The AT-rich highly repeated satellite DNA of Cucurbita pepo (zucchini) and Cucurbita maxima (pumpkin) were cloned and their DNA structure was investigated. DNA sequencing revealed that the repeat length of satellite DNA in Cucurbita pepo is 349–352 base pairs. The percentage of AT-base pairs is about 61%. This satellite is highly conserved in restriction enzyme pattern and DNA sequence; sequence heterogeneity is about 10%. In contrast, the satellite DNA of Cucurbita maxima has a repeat length of 168–169 base pairs. This satellite is also rich in AT-base pairs (64%), existing in at least three different variants as revealed by restriction enzyme analysis and DNA sequencing. The sequence heterogeneity between these variants is about 15%. The two satellite DNAs showed no cross-hybridization to each other and sequence homology is only limited. Nevertheless, we found in the C. pepo genome a high amount of sequences resembling the satellite of C. maxima. In contrast, the satellite repeat of C. pepo is found in the C. maxima DNA only in a few copies. These observations were discussed with respect to satellite DNA evolution and compared to the data received from monocotyledonous species.  相似文献   

5.
A HaeIIl monomer of a repetitive DNA family from Pennisetum glaucum (L.) R. Br. cv. Massue has been cloned and characterized. The repeat is 137 bp long and is organized in head-to-tail orientation in tandem arrays. The HaeIII monomer contains 55% A+T residues. The distribution of this highly repetitive sequence in different Pennisetum species and in other cereals was investigated. The HaeIII satellite is present in all Pennisetum species investigated but absent from other genera examined. In situ hybridization revealed a centromeric localization of this sequence on all seven chromosome pairs and indicated chromosome-specific differences in copy number. Methylation was investigated by comparative restriction enzyme analysis (Msp/HpaII) which showed a greater extent of methylation of the internal C of the enzyme recognition site 5-CCGG. A South-Western analysis, using an anti-methylcytosine antibody to examine the methylation status in P. glaucum confirmed that the sequence is not highly methylated.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Another satellite DNA repeat (type IV) in the genome of Cucumis sativus (cucumber) was found and investigated with respect to DNA sequence, methylation, and evolution. This satellite shows a repeat length of 360 bp and a GC-content of 47%. The repeats of type IV are highly conserved among each other. Evidence for CG and CNG methylation is presented. By comparison to the previously described satellites (type I/II and type III) from cucumber, it is evident that this repeat is created by an insertion of a 180 bp DNA sequence similar to type I–III into another DNA sequence (or vice versa), and subsequent amplification forming a new satellite repeat. The different satellites of the type I/II, type III, and the 180 bp insert of type IV show a sequence homology of 60%–70%, indicating that the complex satellite DNA of cucumber is originated from a common progenitor by mutation, additional insertion, and amplification events. Copies of a sequence similar to a part of type IV are present in the genome of the related species Cucumis melo (melon).  相似文献   

7.
Major satellites of species in the genus Pimelia comprise large portions of their genomes and belong to seven major satellite families which all originate from a common ancestral sequence. Here we present the results of comprehensive screening of 26 Pimelia species belonging to three distinct geographic groups (Ibero-Balearic, African and Canary Islands) for the presence of different Pimelia satellite families in their genomes. Dot-blot hybridization experiments suggest that together with one dominant, highly abundant satellite family, other families are also present in genomes of the majority of examined Pimelia species, but as low-copy number repeats. The estimated abundance of these underrepresented repeats is about 4,000 copies per haploid genome. Signals of highly abundant satellite family from P. scabrosa (PSCA) in examined congeneric species, obtained after PCR amplification and Southern hybridization under high stringency conditions, corroborate sequence preservation of low-copy representatives of satellite families. PRINS localized low-copy repeats within the pericentromeric regions of all chromosomes. These results point to the existence of an extensive library of repetitive DNAs that was already present in the genome of the common ancestor of extant Pimelia taxa, and shifts the period of diversification of Pimelia satellites far in the history of this genus.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Two highly repeated EcoRI (0.45 × 106) and BamHI (0.17 × 106) fragments per haploid genome were found in sugar beet genomic DNA. Both fragments were located by 6% acrylamide-gel electrophoresis, purified and cloned in pUC18. Four of the inserts corresponding to each family were chosen for further study. Both fragment families display the main characteristics of the satellite DNA of animals and plants. The EcoRI and BamHI fragment families are arranged in long tandem arrays. Fragments of the EcoRI family (pBVE) were analyzed. They vary both in sequence and in length (158–160 nt) in comparison with the consensus sequence of 159nt. Both families are A-T rich; pBVE is 59% rich while pBVB is 69% rich. The BVESAT family is present in all the members of the section Vulgares. It is conserved in the section Procumbentes with 80% homology and the same length, but is not detectable in the Corollinae. The sequence variation rate and the variation in length (330±5 nt) are of the same order in comparison with those of the BVESAT family. However, the BVBSAT family is present in species of the section Vulgares only. As regards other plant satellite DNAs, the BVESAT family shares homology with Allium cepa satellite DNA, with three of the yeast centromeric sequences, and with three Arabidopsis thaliana sequences. The BVBSAT family is unique to the Vulgares and does not share any homology with other plant or animal satellite DNAs sequences so far.  相似文献   

9.
Two AT-rich satellite DNAs are present in the genome of Glyptotendipes barbipes. The two satellites have densities of 1.680 g/cm3 (=21% GC) and of 1.673 g/cm3 (=13% GC) in neutral CsCl-density gradients. The main band DNA has a density of 1.691 g/cm3 (=32% GC). This value is in agreement with the 33% GC-content of G. barbipes DNA calculated from thermal denaturation (TM=83° C). — In brain DNA as well as in salivary gland DNA the two satellite sequences together comprise 12–15% of the total G. barbipes DNA. Comparisons of the density profiles of DNA extracted from polytene and non-polytene larval tissue gave no hints for underreplication of the satellite DNAs during polytenization. — The two satellite DNAs have been isolated from total DNA by Hoechst 33258-CsCl density centrifugation and then localized in the polytene salivary gland chromosomes by in situ hybridization. Both satellite sequences hybridize to all heterochromatic centromere bands of all four chromosomes of G. barbipes. Satellite I (1.673 g/cm3) hybridizes mainly with the middle of the heterochromatin, satellite II (1.680 g/cm3) hybridizes with two bands at the margin of the heterochromatin. In situ hybridization with polytene chromosomes of Chironomus thummi revealed the presence of G. barbipes satellite sequences also in the Ch. thummi genome at various locations, mainly the centromere regions.  相似文献   

10.
Cleavage of Vicia faba nuclear DNA with the restriction endonuclease BamHI yielded discrete size classes of 250, 850, 900, 990, 1 150, 1 500 and 1 750 bp of highly repetitive DNA. Each of these sequence families comprised about 3% of the total genomic DNA. Some sequence members from each sequence family were cloned in pBR322 and their primary structures determined. Computer analyses of nucleotide sequences suggested the existence of about 60 bp sequence periodicity within the repeating unit of the 990 bp sequence family, though the extent of homology among the surmised shorter subrepeat units was very low. With other BamHI sequence families, however, the data did not show any clear internal sequence periodicity. The repeat units of the 850 bp and 1 750 bp sequence families contained nucleotide sequences homologous to the 250 bp family sequence. No sequence relationship between or among other sequence families was observed. There was 13–25% sequence variation among 6 cloned members of the 250 bp family and probably also among those of other BamHI repeat families. DNA sequences homologous to these V. faba BamHI repeat families were detected in Pisum sativum DNA by Southern blot hybridization. Furthermore, very weak cross-hybridization was observed with plant DNAs from Phaseolus vulgaris, Triticum aestivum, Cucumis sativus and Trillium kamtschaticum.  相似文献   

11.
The structure, copy number and chromosomal location of arrays of four families of highly repeated sequences have been investigated in representative species of the genus Secale. The four unrelated families, previously characterised in Secale cereale, have repeating units of 480, 610, 630 and 120 base pairs respectively. The following general conclusions can be drawn in addition to detailed knowledge of the sequence content of heterochromatin in each accession studied: (1) Every species is unique in its complement or chromosomal distribution or both of the four highly repeated sequence families. S. montanum and S. cereale accessions studied here show the same complement of repeated sequences, but they differ substantially in the amounts they contain of the 610 and 630 base pair (bp) families, and in the distribution over the chromosomes of the 480 bp family. The structure of the repeating unit is also different in many members of the 480 bp family in S. montanum. — (2) The substantial differences between species in the amounts of the most highly repeated DNA sequences exist in the absence of any such conspicuous differences in most other repeated sequences which were detected as fluorescent bands after restriction enzyme digestion and gel electrophoresis. — (3) Each of the different highly repeated families can exist independently of the other families, though all the families have telomeric sites. Also, in the outbreeding species, heteromorphisms are frequent, and are particularly conspicuous in hybridisation detecting the 480 bp sequence family. — (4) The association of the highly repeated sequences with heterochromatin, discussed in the accompanying paper is generally true for other species in the genus, and the lower amounts of heterochromatin in other Secale species compared to S. cereale are associated with lower amounts of specific families of highly repeated DNA sequences. — (5) Analysis of highly repeated sequence families is likely to provide an easy method of identification of new accessions of Secale.  相似文献   

12.
Members of a highly abundant restriction satellite family have been isolated from the wild beet species Beta nana. The satellite DNA sequence is characterized by a conserved RsaI restriction site and is present in three of four sections of the genus Beta, namely Nanae, Corollinae, and Beta. It was not detected in species of the evolutionary old section Procumbentes, suggesting its amplification after separation of this section. Sequences of eight monomers were aligned revealing a size variation from 209 to 233 bp and an AT content ranging from 56.5% to 60.5%. The similarity between monomers in B. nana varied from 77.7% to 92.2%. Diverged subfamilies were identified by sequence analysis and Southern hybridization. A comparative study of this repetitive DNA element by fluorescent in situ hybridization and Southern analyses in three representative species was performed showing a variable genomic organization and heterogeneous localizations along metaphase chromosomes both within and between species. In B. nana the copy number of this satellite, with some 30,000 per haploid genome, is more than tenfold higher than in Beta lomatogona and up to 200 times higher than in Beta vulgaris, indicating different levels of sequence amplification during evolution in the genus Beta. In sugar beet (B. vulgaris), the large-scale organization of this tandem repeat was examined by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Southern hybridization to genomic DNA digested with DraI demonstrated that satellite arrays are located in AT-rich regions and the tandem repeat is a useful probe for the detection of genetic variation in closely related B. vulgaris cultivars, accessions, and subspecies. Received: 24 May 1996 / Accepted: 13 September 1996  相似文献   

13.
Members of three prominent DNA families of Beta procumbens have been isolated as Sau3A repeats. Two families consisting of repeats of about 158 bp and 312 bp are organized as satellite DNAs (Sau3A satellites I and II), whereas the third family with a repeat length of 202 bp is interspersed throughout the genome. Multi-colour fluorescence in situ hybridization was used for physical mapping of the DNA families, and has shown that these tandemly organized families occur in large heterochromatic and DAPI positive blocks. The Sau3A satellite I hybridized exclusively around or near the centromeres of 10, 11 or 12 chromosomes. The Sau3A satellite family I showed high intraspecific variability and high-resolution physical mapping was performed on pachytene chromosomes using differentially labelled repeats. The physical order of satellite subfamily arrays along a chromosome was visualized and provided evidence that large arrays of plant satellite repeats are not contiguous and consist of distinct subfamily domains. Re-hybridization of a heterologous rRNA probe to mitotic metaphase chromosomes revealed that the 18S-5.8S-25S rRNA genes are located at subterminal position on one chromosome pair missing repeat clusters of the Sau3A satellite family I. It is known that arrays of Sau3A satellite I repeats are tightly linked to a nematode (Heterodera schachtii) resistance gene and our results show that the gene might be located close to the centromere. Large arrays of the Sau3A satellite II were found in centromeric regions of 16 chromosomes and, in addition, a considerable interspersion of repeats over all chromosomes was observed. The family of interspersed 202 bp repeats is uniformly distributed over all chromosomes and largely excluded from the rRNA gene cluster but shows local amplification in some regions. Southern hybridization has shown that all three families are specific for genomes of the section Procumbentes of the genus Beta.  相似文献   

14.
Copy numbers and variation of a clustered long-range repeat family on Chromosome (Chr) 1 have been studied in different species of the genus Mus. The repeat sequence was present in all, as inferred from cross-hybridization with probes derived from the Mus musculus repeat family. Copy numbers determined by dot blot hybridization were very low, from three to six per haploid genome in M. caroli, M. cervicolor, and M. cookii. These species form one branch of the phylogenetic tree in the genus Mus. In the other group of phylogenetically related species—M. spicilegus, M. spretus, M. musculus and M. macedonicus—copy numbers ranged from 6 to 1810 per haploid genome. The repeat cluster is cytogenetically visible as a fine C-band in M. macedonicus and as a C-band positive homogeneously staining region (HSR) in several populations of M. m. domesticus and M. m. musculus. When cytogenetically visible, the clusters contained from 179 to 1810 repeats. Intragenomic restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs), which reflect sequence variation among different copies of the long-range repeat family, increased with higher copy numbers. The high similarity of the RFLP pattern among genomes with C-band positive regions in Chr 1 of M. m. musculus, M. m. domesticus, and M. macedonicus points to a close evolutionary relationship of their Chr 1 repeat families.  相似文献   

15.
We report the cloning, sequencing and analysis of the major repetitive DNA of soybean (Glycine max). The repeat, SB92, was cloned as several monomers and trimers produced by digestion with XhoI. The deduced consensus sequence of the repeat is 92 base pairs long. Genomic sequences do not fluctuate in length. Their average homology to the consensus sequence is 92%. The consensus of SB92 contains slightly degenerated homologies for several 6-cutters. Therefore, many of them generate a ladder of 92-bp oligomers. The distribution of bands seems to be random, but the occurrence of sites for different 6-cutters varies widely. There is no obvious correlation between the sequences of the neighboring units of SB92 in cloned trimers. Also, there are none of the internal repetitive blocks reported for many satellite DNAs from other species. The SB92 repeat makes up 0.7% of total soybean DNA. This is equivalent to 8×104 copies, or 7 megabases. The repeat is organized in giant tandem blocks over 1 Mb in length, and there are fewer blocks than chromosomes. The polymorphism of these blocks is extremely high. The SB92 repeat is present in identical arrangement and number of copies in the ancestral subspecies Glycine soja. There are 10 times fewer copies of the repeat in a related species Vigna unguiculata (cowpea), and no homologies in several other more distant leguminous plants studied.  相似文献   

16.
Nontranscribed spacers in Drosophila ribosomal DNA   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Ribosomal DNA nontranscribed spacers in Drosophila virilis DNA have been examined in some detail by restriction site analysis of cloned segments of rDNA, nucleic acid hybridizations involving unfractionated rDNA, and base composition estimates. The overall G+C content of the spacer is 27–28%; this compares with 39% for rDNA as a whole, 40% for main band DNA, and 26% for the D. virilis satellites. Much of the spacer is comprised of 0.25 kb repeats revealed by digestion with Msp I, Fnu DII or Rsd I, which terminate very near the beginning of the template for the ribosomal RNA precursor. The spacers are heterogeneous in length among rDNA repeats, and this is largely accounted for by variation among rDNA units in the number of 0.25 kb elements per spacer. Despite its high A+T content and the repetitive nature of much of the spacer, and the proximity of rDNA and heterochromatin in Drosophila, pyrimidine tract analysis gave no indication of relatedness between the spacer and satellite DNA sequences. Species of Drosophila closely related to D. virilis have rDNA spacers that are homologous with those in D. virilis to the extent that hybridization of a cloned spacer segment of D. virilis rDNA to various DNA is comparable with hybridization to homologous DNA, and distributions of restriction enzyme cleavage sites are very similar (but not identical) among spacers of the various species. There is spacer length heterogeneity in the rDNA of all species, and each species has a unique major rDNA spacer length. Judging from Southern blot hybridization, D. hydei rDNA spacers have 20–30% sequence homology with D. virilis rDNA spacers, and a repetitive component is similarly sensitive to Msp I and Fnu DII digestion, D. melanogaster rDNA spacers have little or no homology with counterparts in D. virilis rDNA, despite a similar content of 0.25 kb repetitive elements. In contrast, sequences in rDNA that encode 18S and 28S ribosomal RNA have been highly conserved during the divergence of Drosophila species; this is inferred from interspecific hybridizations involving ribosomal RNA and a comparison of distributions of restriction enzyme cleavage sites in rDNA.Dedicated to Professor Wolfgang Beermann on the occasion of his sixtieth birthday  相似文献   

17.
The nucleotide sequence and genetic organization of theBacteroidesplasmid pBI143 were determined. The plasmid was 2747 base pairs (bp) and had a G+C content of 41% (GenBank Accession No. U30316). There were two open reading frames greater than 50 codons and these were designatedmobAandrepA.A 56-bp inverted repeat divided pBI143 into modules withrepAandmobAin separate regions. There was a marked difference in the G+C content and codon usage for the two regions;repAhad 33% G+C andmobAwas 44% G+C. MobA had homology to otherBacteroidesmobilization proteins and RepA shared homology to a replication protein fromZymomonas mobilisplasmid pZM2. These two putative replication proteins formed a subgroup of the rolling-circle replication proteins belonging to the pSN2 family of gram-positive plasmids. Consistent with this finding, single-stranded pBI143 DNA was detected in plasmid containingBacteroides fragiliscultures. Availability of the pBI143 sequence allowed the elucidation of the complete nucleotide sequence for pFD288 an 8.9-kbBacteroidesshuttle vector (GenBank Accession No. U30830).  相似文献   

18.
A HaeIIl monomer of a repetitive DNA family from Pennisetum glaucum (L.) R. Br. cv. Massue has been cloned and characterized. The repeat is 137 bp long and is organized in head-to-tail orientation in tandem arrays. The HaeIII monomer contains 55% A+T residues. The distribution of this highly repetitive sequence in different Pennisetum species and in other cereals was investigated. The HaeIII satellite is present in all Pennisetum species investigated but absent from other genera examined. In situ hybridization revealed a centromeric localization of this sequence on all seven chromosome pairs and indicated chromosome-specific differences in copy number. Methylation was investigated by comparative restriction enzyme analysis (Msp/HpaII) which showed a greater extent of methylation of the internal C of the enzyme recognition site 5′-CCGG. A South-Western analysis, using an anti-methylcytosine antibody to examine the methylation status in P. glaucum confirmed that the sequence is not highly methylated.  相似文献   

19.
CMS (cytoplasmic male sterility) can be controlled by the mitochondrion genome in higher plants, including Satsuma mandarin. Somatic fusion experiments in citrus combining embryogenic callus protoplasts of one parent with leaf protoplasts of a second parent often produce cybrid plants of the leaf parent, a phenomenon occurring most often with interspecific fusion combinations. In an attempt to practically exploit this cybridization phenomenon, we conducted somatic fusion experiments combining embryogenic suspension-derived protoplasts of Satsuma mandarin, Citrus unshiu Marc. cv. Guoqing No. 1 (G1), a male-sterile cultivar, with leaf protoplasts of other seedy types—Hirado Buntan Pink pummelo (HBP) [Citrus grandis (L.) Osbeck], Sunburst mandarin (C. reticulata Blanco), Orie Lee hybrid (C. reticulata cv. Clementine × Murcott tangor), and Murcott tangor [C. reticulata × C. sinensis (L.) Osbeck], respectively—in an attempt to generate seedless cybrids by the targeted transfer of CMS. The genetic identities of regenerated plants from all four parental combinations were determined by flow cytometry, SSR, CAPS (or PCR-RFLP), RFLP, and chloroplast-SSR analyses. Regenerated plants from the first three parental combinations were diploids, and the cybrid nature of G1 + HBP with the mitochondrion genome from G1 and the chloroplast genome from HBP was confirmed, whereas the cybrid nature of the remaining two combinations was difficult to confirm because of the close phylogenetic relatedness of both fusion parents, as expected. Plants from G1 + Murcott were confirmed as tetraploid somatic hybrids. This is the first report of targeted citrus cybrid production by symmetric fusion with male-sterile Satsuma as the callus parent and other seedy cultivars as the leaf parents.Abbreviations CAPS: Cleaved amplified polymorphic sequence - CMS: Cytoplasmic male sterility - cp-SSR: Chloroplast simple sequence repeat - PEG: Polyethylene glycol - SSR: Simple sequence repeat - RFLP: Restriction fragment length polymorphism Communicated by G.C. Phillips  相似文献   

20.
We have investigated the organisation, nucleotide sequence, and chromosomal distribution of a tandemly repeated, satellite DNA from Allium cepa (Liliaceae). The satellite, which constitutes about 4% of the A. cepa genome, may be resolved from main-band DNA in antibiotic-CsCl density gradients, and has a repeat length of about 375 base pairs (bp). A cloned member of the repeat family hybridises exclusively to chromosome telomeres and has a non-random distribution in interphase nuclei. We present the nucleotide sequences of three repeats, which differ at a large number of positions. In addition to arrays made up of 375-bp repeats, homologous sequences are found in units with a greater repeat length. This divergence between repeats reflects the heterogeneity of the satellite determined using other criteria. Possible constraints on the interchromosomal exchange of repeated sequences are discussed.  相似文献   

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