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1.
DNA clones containing foldback sequences, derived from Physarum polycephalum nuclear DNA, can be classified according to their pattern of hydridisation to Southern blots of genomic DNA. One group of DNA clones map to unique DNA loci when used as a probe to restriction digests of Physarum nuclear DNA. These cloned segments appear to contain dispersed repetitive sequence elements located at many hundreds of sites in the genome. Similar patterns of hybridisation are generated when these cloned DNA probes are annealed to DNA restriction fragments of genomic DNA obtained from a number of different Physarum strains, indicating that no detectable alteration has occurred at these genomic loci subsequent to the divergence of the strains as a result of the introduction or deletion of mobile genetic elements. However, deletion of segments of some cloned DNA fragments occurs following their propagation in Escherichia coli. A second, distinct group of clones are shown to be derived from highly methylated segments of Physarum DNA which contain very abundant repetitive sequences with regular, though complex, arrangements of restriction sites at their various genomic locations. It is suggested that these DNA segments contain clustered repetitive sequence elements. The results lead to the conclusion that foldback elements in Physarum DNA are located in segments of the genome which display markedly different patterns of sequence organisation and degree of DNA methylation.  相似文献   

2.
Conserved plant microRNAs (miRNAs) modulate important biological processes but little is known about conserved cis-regulatory elements (CREs) surrounding MIRNA genes. We developed a solution-based targeted genomic enrichment methodology to capture, enrich, and sequence flanking genomic regions surrounding conserved MIRNA genes with a locked-nucleic acid (LNA)-modified, biotinylated probe complementary to the mature miRNA sequence. Genomic DNA bound by the probe is captured by streptavidin-coated magnetic beads, amplified, sequenced and assembled de novo to obtain genomic DNA sequences flanking MIRNA locus of interest. We demonstrate the sensitivity and specificity of this enrichment methodology in Arabidopsis thaliana to enrich targeted regions spanning 10–20 kb surrounding known MIR166 and MIR165 loci. Assembly of the sequencing reads successfully recovered all targeted loci. While further optimization for larger, more complex genomes is needed, this method may enable determination of flanking genomic DNA sequence surrounding a known core (like a conserved mature miRNA) from multiple species that currently don''t have a full genome assembly available.  相似文献   

3.

Background

Analysis of genomic sequence allows characterization of genome content and organization, and access beyond gene-coding regions for identification of functional elements. BAC libraries, where relatively large genomic regions are made readily available, are especially useful for species without a fully sequenced genome and can increase genomic coverage of phylogenetic and biological diversity. For example, no butterfly genome is yet available despite the unique genetic and biological properties of this group, such as diversified wing color patterns. The evolution and development of these patterns is being studied in a few target species, including Bicyclus anynana, where a whole-genome BAC library allows targeted access to large genomic regions.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We characterize ∼1.3 Mb of genomic sequence around 11 selected genes expressed in B. anynana developing wings. Extensive manual curation of in silico predictions, also making use of a large dataset of expressed genes for this species, identified repetitive elements and protein coding sequence, and highlighted an expansion of Alcohol dehydrogenase genes. Comparative analysis with orthologous regions of the lepidopteran reference genome allowed assessment of conservation of fine-scale synteny (with detection of new inversions and translocations) and of DNA sequence (with detection of high levels of conservation of non-coding regions around some, but not all, developmental genes).

Conclusions

The general properties and organization of the available B. anynana genomic sequence are similar to the lepidopteran reference, despite the more than 140 MY divergence. Our results lay the groundwork for further studies of new interesting findings in relation to both coding and non-coding sequence: 1) the Alcohol dehydrogenase expansion with higher similarity between the five tandemly-repeated B. anynana paralogs than with the corresponding B. mori orthologs, and 2) the high conservation of non-coding sequence around the genes wingless and Ecdysone receptor, both involved in multiple developmental processes including wing pattern formation.  相似文献   

4.
The cyanobacterium, Microcystis aeruginosa, contains a large number of defense genes (Makarova et al., 2011); thus, it is a good model to study the co-evolution of phage and bacteria. Here, we isolated and characterized two phage-resistant M. aeruginosa mutants that came from a phage intermediate-sensitive culture. To determine the mutation conferring resistance, a protein expression pattern analysis was performed comparing phage-sensitive and -resistant sub-strains using SDS-PAGE. There were no apparent differences in expression patterns in the soluble fraction; however, a ∼90 kDa protein in the hydrophobic fraction from the phage-sensitive sub-strain was observed. Using a successive thermal asymmetric interlaced-PCR, the entire sequence encoding the protein, assigned ISP90, as well as its neighboring regions (ca. 7.8 kb) was determined. ISP90 contained no conserved domains and was predicted to be a membrane-associated protein. No mutations were detected in the nucleotide sequences coding ISP90 and diversification of ISP90 regions within this species were observed. Diversification of ISP90 regions within this species suggests a possible genomic island that may be subjected to selective pressures from phages. The ISP90 sequence involving phage resistance/sensitivity contributes to the understanding of co-evolution between M. aeruginosa and phages.  相似文献   

5.
The biochemical and biophysical techniques originally introduced by Davidson et al. (1973) and Graham et al. (1974) for the determination of the general organization and length of repetitive and non-repetitive sequences in eukaryotic DNA have been extended and modified. Improvements in the experimental methods employed in these pioneering works have led to novel interpretations and conclusions about mammalian DNA sequence organization. In what is commonly referred to as an interspersion experiment, the average spacing of repetitive DNA regions is inferred from the length dependence of hydroxyapatite binding of radio-labeled tracer DNAs reassociated with an excess of short 200 nucleotide repetitive sequence driver DNA. Studies on Syrian hamster DNA, using an improved procedure for conducting interspersion experiments, suggest that either a frequent cluster in the distribution of non-repetitive DNA sequence lengths occurs at 7200 (±2000) nucleotides or that repetitive sequences are randomly spaced on a number average basis. In contrast, measurements obtained using the traditional methods suggest that a frequent cluster in the distribution of non-repetitive DNA sequence lengths occurs at approximately 1000 nucleotides. When reassociations were conducted at elevated temperatures, to allow only well-matched repetitive sequences to hybridize, the amount of DNA operationally observed as “repetitive” was reduced. Interspersion experiments conducted with Syrian hamster DNA at a reassociation temperature of 75 °C yielded data similar to those obtained by Manning et al. (1975) for Drosophila melanogaster DNA reassociated at 60 °C.  相似文献   

6.
《Gene》1998,216(2):233-243
Starch branching enzymes (SBE) which catalyse the formation of α-1,6-glucan linkages are of crucial importance for the quantity and quality of starch synthesized in plants. In maize (Zea mays L.), three SBE isoforms (SBEI, IIa and IIb) have been identified and shown to exhibit differential expression patterns. As a first step toward understanding the regulatory mechanisms controlling their expression, we isolated and sequenced a maize genomic DNA (−2190 to +5929) which contains the entire coding region of SBEI (Sbe1) as well as 5′-and 3′-flanking sequences. Using this clone, we established a complete genomic organization of the maize Sbe1 gene. The transcribed region consists of 14 exons and 13 introns, distributed over 5.7 kb. A consensus TATA-box and a G-box containing a perfect palindromic sequence, CCACGTGG, were found in the 5′-flanking region. Genomic Southern blot analysis indicated that two Sbe1 genes with divergent 5′-flanking sequences exist in the maize genome, suggesting the possibility that they are differentially regulated. A chimeric construct containing the 5′-flanking region of Sbe1 (−2190 to +27) fused to the β-glucuronidase gene (pKG101) showed promoter activity after it was introduced into maize endosperm suspension cells by particle bombardment.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Unlocking the vast genomic diversity stored in natural history collections would create unprecedented opportunities for genome-scale evolutionary, phylogenetic, domestication and population genomic studies. Many researchers have been discouraged from using historical specimens in molecular studies because of both generally limited success of DNA extraction and the challenges associated with PCR-amplifying highly degraded DNA. In today''s next-generation sequencing (NGS) world, opportunities and prospects for historical DNA have changed dramatically, as most NGS methods are actually designed for taking short fragmented DNA molecules as templates. Here we show that using a standard multiplex and paired-end Illumina sequencing approach, genome-scale sequence data can be generated reliably from dry-preserved plant, fungal and insect specimens collected up to 115 years ago, and with minimal destructive sampling. Using a reference-based assembly approach, we were able to produce the entire nuclear genome of a 43-year-old Arabidopsis thaliana (Brassicaceae) herbarium specimen with high and uniform sequence coverage. Nuclear genome sequences of three fungal specimens of 22–82 years of age (Agaricus bisporus, Laccaria bicolor, Pleurotus ostreatus) were generated with 81.4–97.9% exome coverage. Complete organellar genome sequences were assembled for all specimens. Using de novo assembly we retrieved between 16.2–71.0% of coding sequence regions, and hence remain somewhat cautious about prospects for de novo genome assembly from historical specimens. Non-target sequence contaminations were observed in 2 of our insect museum specimens. We anticipate that future museum genomics projects will perhaps not generate entire genome sequences in all cases (our specimens contained relatively small and low-complexity genomes), but at least generating vital comparative genomic data for testing (phylo)genetic, demographic and genetic hypotheses, that become increasingly more horizontal. Furthermore, NGS of historical DNA enables recovering crucial genetic information from old type specimens that to date have remained mostly unutilized and, thus, opens up a new frontier for taxonomic research as well.  相似文献   

9.
Genomic degradation of a young Y chromosome in Drosophila miranda   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文

Background

Y chromosomes are derived from ordinary autosomes and degenerate because of a lack of recombination. Well-studied Y chromosomes only have few of their original genes left and contain little information about their evolutionary origin. Here, we take advantage of the recently formed neo-Y chromosome of Drosophila miranda to study the processes involved in Y degeneration on a genomic scale.

Results

We obtained sequence information from 14 homologous bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones from the neo-X and neo-Y chromosome of D. miranda, encompassing over 2.5 Mb of neo-sex-linked DNA. A large fraction of neo-Y DNA is composed of repetitive and transposable-element-derived DNA (20% of total DNA) relative to their homologous neo-X linked regions (1%). The overlapping regions of the neo-sex linked BAC clones contain 118 gene pairs, half of which are pseudogenized on the neo-Y. Pseudogenes evolve significantly faster on the neo-Y than functional genes, and both functional and non-functional genes show higher rates of protein evolution on the neo-Y relative to their neo-X homologs. No heterogeneity in levels of degeneration was detected among the regions investigated. Functional genes on the neo-Y are under stronger evolutionary constraint on the neo-X, but genes were found to degenerate randomly on the neo-Y with regards to their function or sex-biased expression patterns.

Conclusion

Patterns of genome evolution in D. miranda demonstrate that degeneration of a recently formed Y chromosome can proceed very rapidly, by both an accumulation of repetitive DNA and degeneration of protein-coding genes. Our data support a random model of Y inactivation, with little heterogeneity in degeneration among genomic regions, or between functional classes of genes or genes with sex-biased expression patterns.  相似文献   

10.
《Gene》1998,222(1):41-51
Although large deletions comprise 65% of the mutations that underlie most cases of Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophies, the DNA sequence characteristics of the deletions and the molecular processes leading to their formation are largely unknown. Intron 7 of the human dystrophin gene is unusually large (110 kb) and a substantial number of deletions have been identified with endpoints within this intron. The distribution of 28 deletion endpoints was mapped to local sequence elements by PCR. The break points were distributed among unique sequence, LINE-1, Alu, MIR, MER and microsatellite sequences with frequencies expected from the frequency of those sequences in the intron. Thus, deletions in this intron are not associated primarily with any one of those sequences in the intron. Nine deletion junctions were amplified and sequenced. Eight were deletions between DNA sequences with minimal homology (0–4 bp) and are therefore unlikely to be products of homologous recombination. In the ninth case, a complex rearrangement was found to be consistent with unequal recombinational exchange between two Alu sequences coupled with a duplication. We have hypothesized that a paucity of matrix attachment regions in this very large intron expanded by the insertion of many mobile elements might provoke a chromatin structure that stimulates deletions (McNaughton et al., 1997, Genomics 40, 294–304). The data presented here are consistent with that idea and demonstrate that the deletion sequences are not usually produced by homologous DNA misalignments.  相似文献   

11.
Repetitive DNA sequence families have been identified in methylated relic DNAs of rye. This study sought to isolate rye genome-specific repetitive elements regardless of the level of methylation, using a genomic subtraction method. The total genomic DNAs of rye-chromosome-addition-wheat lines were cleaved to short fragments with a methylation-insensitive 4-bp cutter, MboI, and then common DNA sequences between rye and wheat were subtracted by annealing with excess wheat genomic DNA. Four classes of rye-specific repetitive elements were successfully isolated from both the methylated and non-methylated regions of the genome. Annealing of the DNA mixture at a ratio of the enzyme-restricted fragments:the sonicated fragments (1:3–1:5) was key to this success. Two classes of repetitive elements identified here belong to representative repetitive families: the tandem 350-family and the dispersed R173 family. Southern blot hybridization patterns of the two repetitive elements showed distinct fragments in methylation-insensitive EcoO109I digests, but continuous smear signals in the methylation-sensitive PstI and SalI digests, indicating that both of the known families are contained in the methylated regions. The subtelomeric tandem 350-family is organized by multimers of a 380-bp-core unit defined by the restriction enzyme EcoO109I. The other two repetitive element classes had new DNA sequences (444, 89 bp) and different core-unit sizes, as defined by methylation-sensitive enzymes. The EcoO109I recognition sites consisting of PyCCNGGPu-multi sequences existed with high frequency in the four types of rye repetitive families and might be a useful tool for studying the genomic organization and differentiation of this species.  相似文献   

12.
Total genomic DNA from Bursaphelenchus xylophilus pathotypes MPSy-1 and VPSt-1 and from B. mucronatus was digested with restriction endonucleases. DNA fragments were electrophoretically separated, Southern blotted to nitrocellulose, and hybridized to genomic DNA from one of the isolates. The resulting hybridization patterns indicate genomic differences in repetitive DNA sequences among these populations. Greatest differences were seen between B. xylophilus and B. mucronatus, but genomic differences were also apparent between B. xylophilus pathotypes MPSy-1 and VPSt-1 and between a population from P. nigra in New Jersey and a population of a mucronate form from Abies balsamea in Quebec, Canada.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
We have mapped in vitro nucleosome positioning on the sheep β-lactoglobulin gene using high-throughput sequencing to characterise the DNA sequences recovered from reconstituted nucleosomes. This methodology surpasses previous approaches for coverage, accuracy and resolution and, most importantly, offers a simple yet rapid and relatively inexpensive method to characterise genomic DNA sequences in terms of nucleosome positioning capacity. We demonstrate an unambiguous correspondence between in vitro and in vivo nucleosome positioning around the promoter of the gene; identify discrete, sequence-specific nucleosomal structures above the level of the canonical core particle—a feature that has implications for regulatory protein access and higher-order chromatin packing; and reveal new insights into the involvement of periodically organised dinucleotide sequence motifs of the type GG and CC and not AA and TT, as determinants of nucleosome positioning—an observation that supports the idea that the core histone octamer can exploit different patterns of sequence organisation, or structural potential, in the DNA to bring about nucleosome positioning.  相似文献   

15.
Uptake signal sequences are DNA motifs that promote DNA uptake by competent bacteria in the family Pasteurellaceae and the genus Neisseria. The genomes of these bacteria contain many copies of their canonical uptake sequence (often >100-fold overrepresentation), so the bias of the uptake machinery causes cells to prefer DNA derived from close relatives over DNA from other sources. However, the molecular and evolutionary forces responsible for the abundance of uptake sequences in these genomes are not well understood, and their presence is not easily explained by any of the current models of the evolution of competence. Here we describe use of a computer simulation model to thoroughly evaluate the simplest explanation for uptake sequences, that they accumulate in genomes by a form of molecular drive generated by biased DNA uptake and evolutionarily neutral (i.e., unselected) recombination. In parallel we used an unbiased search algorithm to characterize genomic uptake sequences and DNA uptake assays to refine the Haemophilus influenzae uptake specificity. These analyses showed that biased uptake and neutral recombination are sufficient to drive uptake sequences to high densities, with the spacings, stabilities, and strong consensuses typical of uptake sequences in real genomes. This result greatly simplifies testing of hypotheses about the benefits of DNA uptake, because it explains how genomes could have passively accumulated sequences matching the bias of their uptake machineries.MANY bacteria are able to take up DNA fragments from their environment, a genetically specified trait called natural competence (Chen and Dubnau 2004; Johnsborg et al. 2007; Maughan et al. 2008). Many other species have homologs of competence genes, suggesting that although they are not competent under laboratory conditions, they may be competent under natural conditions (Claverys and Martin 2003; Kovacs et al. 2009). Such a widespread trait must be beneficial but the evolutionary function of DNA uptake remains controversial. Cells can use the nucleotides released by degradation of both incoming DNA and any strands displaced by its recombination, thus reducing demands on their nucleotide salvage and biosynthesis pathways (Redfield 1993; Palchevskiy and Finkel 2009). Cells may also benefit if recombination of the incoming DNA provides templates for DNA repair or introduces beneficial mutations, but may suffer if recombination introduces damage or harmful mutations (Redfield 1988; Michod et al. 2008).Although most bacteria that have been tested show no obvious preferences for specific DNA sources or sequences, bacteria in the family Pasteurellaceae and the genus Neisseria strongly prefer DNA fragments from close relatives. Two factors are responsible: First, the DNA uptake machineries of these bacteria are strongly biased toward certain short DNA sequence motifs. Second, the genomes of these bacteria contain hundreds of occurrences of the preferred sequences. The Pasteurellacean motif is called the uptake signal sequence (USS); its Neisseria counterpart is called the DNA uptake sequence (DUS). All Neisseria genomes contain the same consensus DUS [core GCCGTCTGAA (Treangen et al. 2008)], but divergence in the Pasteurellaceae has produced two subclades, one of species sharing the canonical Haemophilus influenzae 9-bp USS (Hin-USS core AAGTGCGGT) and the other of species with a variant USS that differs at three core positions (Apl-USS core: ACAAGCGGT) and has a longer flanking consensus (Redfield et al. 2006). Uptake sequence biases are strong but not absolute; for example, replacing the Hin-USS with the Apl-USS reduces H. influenzae DNA uptake only 10-fold (Redfield et al. 2006) and DNA from Escherichia coli is taken up in the absence of competing H. influenzae DNA (Goodgal and Mitchell 1984).Most studies of the distribution and consensus of uptake sequences in genomes have examined only those occurrences that perfectly match the above core DUS and USS sequences. Here we call these perfect matches “core-consensus” (cc) uptake sequences. These cc-uptake sequences occupy ∼1% of their genomes; they are equally frequent in the plus and minus orientations of the genome sequence but are underrepresented in coding sequences, with the noncoding 14% and 20% of their respective genomes containing 35% of cc-USSs and 65% of cc-DUSs (Smith et al. 1995). Although many of these intergenic cc-DUSs and cc-USSs occur in inverted-repeat pairs that function as terminators (Kingsford et al. 2007), most uptake sequences are too far apart or in genes or other locations where termination does not occur. Within coding regions uptake sequences occur more often in weakly conserved genes, in weakly conserved parts of genes, and in reading frames that encode common tripeptides (Findlay and Redfield 2009), all of which are consistent with selection acting mainly to eliminate mutations that improve uptake from genome regions constrained by coding or other functions.Analyses that focus on cc-uptake sequences effectively treat uptake sequences as replicative elements (Smith et al. 1995; Redfield et al. 2006; Ambur et al. 2007; Treangen et al. 2008). However, USS and DUS are known to originate in situ by normal mutational processes, mainly point mutations, and to spread between genomes mainly by homologous recombination (Redfield et al. 2006; Treangen et al. 2008). As they are not replicating elements, why are they up to 1000-fold more common in their genomes than expected for unselected sequences (e.g., H. influenzae, 1471 cc-USS vs. 8 expected by chance; N. gonorrheae, 1892 cc-DUS vs. 2 expected by chance)?The explanation for this abundance must lie with the specificity of the DNA uptake system, because the strong correspondence between the uptake bias and the uptake sequences in the genome is far too improbable to be a coincidence. However, uptake specificity is not easily accommodated by either of the hypothesized functions of DNA uptake. If bacteria take up DNA to get benefits from homologous genetic recombination, the combination of uptake bias and uptake sequences might serve as a mate-choice adaptation that maximizes these benefits by excluding foreign DNAs (Treangen et al. 2008). Although this explanation is appealing, it requires simultaneous evolution of bias in the uptake machinery and of genomic sequences matching this bias. Another problem is that the genomic sequences can be “selected” only after the cell carrying them is dead. On the other hand, if bacteria instead take up DNA as a source of nutrients, all DNAs should be equally useful, so uptake bias and uptake sequences would likely reduce rather than increase this benefit. Although the sequence bias could be explained as a consequence of mechanistic constraints on DNA uptake, this would not account for the high density of the preferred sequences in the genome.However, both hypotheses may be simplified by a process called molecular drive, under which uptake sequences would gradually accumulate over evolutionary time as a direct consequence of biased uptake and recombination (Danner et al. 1980; Bakkali et al. 2004; Bakkali 2007), without any need for natural selection. This drive is proposed to work as follows: First, random mutation continuously creates variation in DNA sequences that affects their probability of uptake, and random cell death allows DNA fragments containing preferred variants to be taken up by other cells. Second, repeated recombination of such preferred DNA sequences with their chromosomal homologs gradually increases their abundance in the genomes of competent cells'' descendants. Thus mutations that create matches to the bias of the uptake machinery are horizontally transmitted to other members of the same species more often than other mutations. Because some recombination may be inevitable even if DNA''s main benefit is nutritional, molecular drive could account for uptake sequence accumulation under both hypotheses, leaving only the biased uptake process to be explained by natural selection for either genetic variation or nutrients.Although drive is plausible, its ability to account for the observed properties of genomic uptake sequences has never been evaluated. To do this, we developed a realistic computer simulation model that includes only the processes thought to generate molecular drive. Below we first use this model to identify the conditions that determine whether uptake sequences will accumulate and then compare the properties of these simulated uptake sequences to those of the uptake sequences in the N. meningitidis and H. influenzae genomes. In parallel we use unbiased motif searches to better characterize genomic uptake sequences and DNA uptake assays to refine the H. influenzae uptake specificity.  相似文献   

16.
The complete nucleotide sequence of the DNA of bacteriophage φX174 has been determined. The provisional sequence (Sanger et al., 1977a) deduced largely by the plus and minus method, has been completed and confirmed, predominantly using the terminator method (Sanger et al., 1977b). About 30 revisions were found to be necessary in the 5386-nucleotide sequence. The amino acid sequences of the ten proteins for which the DNA codes have also been deduced.  相似文献   

17.
Total polysomal RNA from Xenopus laevis stage 40 embryos was probed for the presence of repetitive sequences by Northern blot analysis with a genomic DNA fragment which had previously been shown to contain several repetitive sequence elements (Spohr et al., 1981). The analysis revealed that various presumptive mRNAs contain sequences complementary to the repetitive probe. Consequently, a cDNA library was constructed and screened with the same probe. Forty-eight positive recombinants containing eucaryotic inserts of 300–700 base pairs were isolated and one such clone was characterized in detail. Analysis of its nucleotide sequence revealed the presence of an open reading frame for 118 amino acids. Comparison of nucleotide sequences located 3′ to this presumptive protein coding region with the sequence of the genomic DNA fragment used as a probe clearly identifies and allows one to define the exact location of the repetitive element in the cloned cDNA. This analysis shows furthermore that one portion of the repeated sequence is highly conserved in the two members of this repetitive sequence family, whereas the other part is more divergent. In this area blocks of oligonucleotides are scattered between nonhomologous DNA stretches. The occurrence frequency of the presumptive mRNAs which carry repetitive elements homologous to the used repetitive probe is suggested to be close to that of rare mRNAs.  相似文献   

18.
Epigenetics describes the heritable changes in gene function that occur independently to the DNA sequence. The molecular basis of epigenetic gene regulation is complex, but essentially involves modifications to the DNA itself or the proteins with which DNA associates. The predominant epigenetic modification of DNA in mammalian genomes is methylation of cytosine nucleotides (5-MeC). DNA methylation provides instruction to gene expression machinery as to where and when the gene should be expressed. The primary target sequence for DNA methylation in mammals is 5''-CpG-3'' dinucleotides (Figure 1). CpG dinucleotides are not uniformly distributed throughout the genome, but are concentrated in regions of repetitive genomic sequences and CpG "islands" commonly associated with gene promoters (Figure 1). DNA methylation patterns are established early in development, modulated during tissue specific differentiation and disrupted in many disease states including cancer. To understand the biological role of DNA methylation and its role in human disease, precise, efficient and reproducible methods are required to detect and quantify individual 5-MeCs.This protocol for bisulphite conversion is the "gold standard" for DNA methylation analysis and facilitates identification and quantification of DNA methylation at single nucleotide resolution. The chemistry of cytosine deamination by sodium bisulphite involves three steps (Figure 2). (1) Sulphonation: The addition of bisulphite to the 5-6 double bond of cytosine (2) Hydrolic Deamination: hydrolytic deamination of the resulting cytosine-bisulphite derivative to give a uracil-bisulphite derivative (3) Alkali Desulphonation: Removal of the sulphonate group by an alkali treatment, to give uracil. Bisulphite preferentially deaminates cytosine to uracil in single stranded DNA, whereas 5-MeC, is refractory to bisulphite-mediated deamination. Upon PCR amplification, uracil is amplified as thymine while 5-MeC residues remain as cytosines, allowing methylated CpGs to be distinguished from unmethylated CpGs by presence of a cytosine "C" versus thymine "T" residue during sequencing.DNA modification by bisulphite conversion is a well-established protocol that can be exploited for many methods of DNA methylation analysis. Since the detection of 5-MeC by bisulphite conversion was first demonstrated by Frommer et al.1 and Clark et al.2, methods based around bisulphite conversion of genomic DNA account for the majority of new data on DNA methylation. Different methods of post PCR analysis may be utilized, depending on the degree of specificity and resolution of methylation required. Cloning and sequencing is still the most readily available method that can give single nucleotide resolution for methylation across the DNA molecule.  相似文献   

19.
Analysis of a drosophila tRNA gene cluster   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23  
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20.
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