首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
2.
3.
Twenty-one in vitro-fertilized bovine blastocysts were quartered, lysed and subjected to primer elongation preamplification (PEP) procedure, allowing for the analysis of up to 40 genotypes per quarter embryo. The quarter-embryos were sexed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using BRY.1, Bov97M and ZFX/ZFY loci, and then genotyped for k-casein, bovine leukocyte adhesion deficiency (BLAD) and microsatellite D9S1. The mitochondrial cytochrome B locus was used as an internal control with a 95% success rate. The PEP procedure amplified genomic fragments in 93% of all cases. The embryos were identified to be 11 males and 10 females. Sexing accuracy was 87% for BRY.1, 97% for ZFX/ZFY and 100% for Bov97M. False genotyping was due mostly to amplification of BRY.1 in the female embryos and to the nonamplification of the ZFY locus in the male embryos. The results indicate that the combined use of Bov97M and ZFX/ZFY loci is a highly accurate procedure for sexing bovine embryos. Genotyping for kappa-casein, D9S1 and BLAD was successful in 94, 99 and 91% of assays, respectively. Sex ratios and allele frequencies of embryos for gk-casein, BLAD and D9S1 were all close to the observed frequencies in the Israeli Holstein population. These results support the conclusion that the genotyping of embryos is as accurate as that of mature animals. Thus, marker-assisted selection can be efficiently applied at the preimplantation embryo level for loci of economic importance.  相似文献   

4.
Buffalo Y-chromosome specific repetitive DNA (BuRY.I) was cloned and sequenced in order to develop a sensitive method for sexing of buffalo preimplantation stage embryos using polymerase chain reaction (PCR). A highly sensitive and reliable sex determination assay using a primary (BRY.I), nested (BuRYN.I) and multiplex (BuRYN.I, ZFX/ZFY) PCR was developed. The BRY.I and BuRYN.I primers are targeted to amplify Y-specific sequences, while the ZFX/ZFY loci was amplified to serve as a positive control for both male and female samples. Accuracy of the sex determination assay was initially verified with genomic DNA obtained from blood of known gender. Further sensitivity and reproducibility of the assay was examined using DNA obtained from 1 or 2 blastomeres to demi embryos. Altogether, 80 IVF-derived embryos ranging from the 2 to 4 cell to the blastocyst stage were used for sex determination. Definite and clear signals following PCR amplification were obtained from all embryo samples. Accuracy of assays was determined by comparing results from a single cell with those of blastocyst stage embryos, thereby indicating that 1 or 2 blastomeres from a preimplantation buffalo embryo is sufficient for sex determination by PCR. No misidentification was observed within the embryo samples using nested (BuRY.I), primary (BRY.I) and multiplex (BuRYN.I; ZFX/ZFY) PCR, suggesting that this technique is a highly reliable method for sexing buffalo embryos.  相似文献   

5.
Three male-specific PCR products of the sequences BC1.2, lambda ES6.0, and BRY.1 were used as probes for Southern blot analyses. Each of these probes generated a complex male-specific band pattern, which showed some quantitative variations among bulls. Hybridization patterns obtained with the BC1.2 and lambda ES6.0 PCR products were interrelated. Chromosomal locations of these repeats were determined by hybridizing the tritiated PCR products in situ to male metaphase spreads. The BC1.2 and lambda ES6.0 PCR products hybridized to Yp13-->p12, whereas the BRY.1 PCR product hybridized over the entire Y chromosome. In addition, the BC1.2 and lambda ES6.0 PCR products hybridized to the distal half of the acrocentric Y chromosome of Bos indicus, indicating that the short arm of the B. taurus Y chromosome is homologous with the telomeric end of the B. indicus Y and supporting the notion that the Y chromosomes of these two species differ by a pericentric inversion.  相似文献   

6.
The maintenance of the telomeres in Drosophila species depends on the transposition of the non-LTR retrotransposons HeT-A, TAHRE and TART. HeT-A and TART elements have been found in all studied species of Drosophila suggesting that their function has been maintained for more than 60 million years. Of the three elements, HeT-A is by far the main component of D. melanogaster telomeres and, unexpectedly for an element with an essential role in telomere elongation, the conservation of the nucleotide sequence of HeT-A is very low. In order to better understand the function of this telomeric retrotransposon, we studied the degree of conservation along HeT-A copies. We identified a small sequence within the 3' UTR of the element that is extremely conserved among copies of the element both, within D. melanogaster and related species from the melanogaster group. The sequence corresponds to a piRNA target in D. melanogaster that we named HeT-A_pi1. Comparison with piRNA target sequences from other Drosophila retrotransposons showed that HeT-A_pi1 is the piRNA target in the Drosophila genome with the highest degree of conservation among species from the melanogaster group. The high conservation of this piRNA target in contrast with the surrounding sequence, suggests an important function of the HeT-A_pi1 sequence in the co-evolution of the HeT-A retrotransposon and the Drosophila genome.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Some regions of the genomes of human B-lymphotrophic virus (HBLV), also designated as human herpesvirus 6, and Marek's disease virus were found to hybridize to each other under moderate to stringent conditions, scoring from 10 to 30% base-pair mismatch. Nucleotide sequence analysis showed that a 6-base-pair repetitive sequence, GGGTTA (DR2), present in the IRS-IRL junction region of the Marek's disease virus genome, was also reiterated in the HBLV genome. The function(s) of such a sequence is unknown, but this is the first report of homology between HBLV and a nonhuman herpesvirus.  相似文献   

9.
10.
R A Robinson  D J O'Callaghan 《Cell》1983,32(2):569-578
The integration patterns of viral DNA sequences in three hamster embryo cell lines independently derived by transformation with equine herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1) have been investigated by DNA blot hybridization analyses for the restriction enzymes Eco RI, Bgl II, Xba I and Bam HI with 32P-labeled selected DNAs from a collection of cloned EHV-1 restriction enzyme fragments as probes. These EHV-1-transformed cell lines contained subgenomic portions of the viral genome in an integrated state at multiple sites in the host genome. At least one copy of a viral DNA sequence mapping colinearly from 0.32 to 0.38 map units within the EHV-1 genome was common among these three EHV-1 transformed cell lines. The 0.32–0.38 viral DNA sequence was maintained stably even after 125 cell passages, whereas sequences from other positions in the EHV-1 genome were lost progressively during continued cell passage. The significance of the findings that these oncogenically transformed cell lines harbor a specific region of the EHV-1 genome is discussed with regard to stable maintenance of the oncogenically transformed state.  相似文献   

11.
The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) genome consists of two components, L (long) and S (short), that invert relative to each other during productive infection to generate four equimolar isomeric forms of viral DNA. Recent studies have indicated that this genome isomerization is the result of DNA replication-mediated homologous recombination between the large inverted repeat sequences that exist in the genome, rather than site-specific recombination through the terminal repeat a sequences present at the L-S junctions. However, there has never been an unequivocal demonstration of the dispensability of the latter element for this process using a recombinant virus whose genome lacks a sequences at its L-S junctions. This is because the genetic manipulations required to generate such a viral mutant are not possible using simple marker transfer, since the cleavage and encapsidation signals of the a sequence represent essential cis-acting elements which cannot be deleted outright from the viral DNA. To circumvent this problem, a simple two-step strategy was devised by which essential cis-acting sites like the a sequence can be readily deleted from their natural loci in large viral DNA genomes. This method involved initial duplication of the element at a neutral site in the viral DNA and subsequent deletion of the element from its native site. By using this approach, the a sequence at the L-S junction was rendered dispensable for virus replication through the insertion of a second copy into the thymidine kinase (TK) gene of the viral DNA; the original copies at the L-S junctions were then successfully deleted from this virus by conventional marker transfer. The final recombinant virus, HSV-1::L-S(delta)a, was found to be capable of undergoing normal levels of genome isomerization on the basis of the presence of equimolar concentrations of restriction fragments unique to each of the four isomeric forms of the viral DNA. Interestingly, only two of these genomic isomers could be packaged into virions. This restriction was the result of inversion of the L component during isomerization, which prevented two of the four isomers from having the cleavage and encapsidation signals of the a sequence in the TK gene in a packageable orientation. This phenomenon was exploited as a means of directly measuring the kinetics of HSV-1::L-S(delta)a genome isomerization. Following infection with virions containing just the two packaged genomic isomers, all four isomers were readily detected at a stage in infection coincident with the onset of DNA replication, indicating that the loss of the a sequence at the L-S junction had no adverse effect on the frequency of isomerization events in this virus. These results therefore validate the homologous recombination model of HSV-1 genome isomerization by directly demonstrating that the a sequence at the L-S junction is dispensable for this process. The strategy used to remove the a sequence from the HSV-1 genome in this work should be broadly applicable to studies of essential cis-acting elements in other large viral DNA molecules.  相似文献   

12.
To explore types, levels and patterns of genetic divergence among diploid Gossypium (cotton) genomes, 780 cDNA, genomic DNA and simple sequence repeat (SSR) loci were re-sequenced in Gossypium herbaceum (A1 genome), G. arboreum (A2), G. raimondii (D5), G. trilobum (D8), G. sturtianum (C1) and an outgroup, Gossypioides kirkii. Divergence among these genomes ranged from 7.32 polymorphic base pairs per 100 between G. kirkii and G. herbaceum (A1) to only 1.44 between G. herbaceum (A1) and G. arboreum (A2). SSR loci are least conserved with 12.71 polymorphic base pairs and 3.77 polymorphic sites per 100 base pairs, whereas expressed sequence tags are most conserved with 3.96 polymorphic base pairs and 2.06 sites. SSR loci also exhibit the highest percentage of 'extended polymorphisms' (spanning multiple consecutive nucleotides). The A genome lineage was particularly rapidly evolving, with the D genome also showing accelerated evolution relative to the C genome. Unexpected asymmetry in mutation rates was found, with much more transition than transversion mutation in the D genome after its divergence from a common ancestor shared with the A genome. This large quantity of orthologous DNA sequence strongly supports a phylogeny in which A-C divergence is more recent than A-D divergence, a subject that is of much importance in view of A-D polyploid formation being key to the evolution of the most productive and finest-quality cottons. Loci that are monomorphic within A or D genome types, but polymorphic between genome types, may be of practical importance for identifying locus-specific DNA markers in tetraploid cottons including leading cultivars.  相似文献   

13.
14.
FGFRL1 is a novel member of the fibroblast growth factor receptor family that controls the formation of musculoskeletal tissues. Some vertebrates, including man, cow, dog, mouse, rat and chicken, possess a single copy the FGFRL1 gene. Teleostean fish have two copies, fgfrl1a and fgfrl1b, because they have undergone a whole genome duplication. Vertebrates belong to the chordates, a phylum that also includes the subphyla of the cephalochordates (e.g. Branchiostoma floridae) and urochordates (tunicates, e.g. Ciona intestinalis). We therefore investigated whether other chordates might also possess an FGFRL1 related gene. In fact, a homologous gene was found in B. floridae (amphioxus). The corresponding protein showed 60% sequence identity with the human protein and all sequence motifs identified in the vertebrate proteins were also conserved in amphioxus Fgfrl1. In contrast, the genome of the urochordate C. intestinalis and those from more distantly related invertebrates including the insect Drosophila melanogaster and the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans did not appear to contain any related sequences. Thus, the FGFRL1 gene might have evolved just before branching of the vertebrate lineage from the other chordates.  相似文献   

15.
Paul Denny  Rachael Bate  Ann-Marie Mallon 《Genome biology》2001,2(11):comment2009.1-comment20095
Having a working draft of the human genome sequence is proving invaluable to mouse genetic and genomic studies, providing a useful stepping-stone towards the finished sequence of the mouse genome.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Certain human DNA regions are strikingly undermethylated at CpG sites in sperm compared to adult somatic tissues. These sperm-specific hypomethylation sequences are thought to function early in embryogenesis or gametogenesis. By using the restriction landmark genomic scanning (RLGS) cloning method, we have isolated a novel sperm-specific hypomethylation sequence, the status of which changes during spermatogenesis, embryonal growth and differentiation. This sequence is a part of a new 'NotI repeat' consisting of a 1.4 kb repetitive unit sequence named DE-1. The sequence is GC-rich and has high homology to a CpG DNA clone that was isolated by a methyl CpG protein binding column, indicating that it was normally highly methylated. We investigated the methylation status of this sequence. In the normal genome the sequence was methylated, but in the human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) genome, the target sequence was demethylated at the cytosine residue of the CpG dinucleotides with high frequency (75% in the previous study). These data suggest that this regional DNA hypomethylation may play a role in both cell differentiation and hepatocarcinogenesis.  相似文献   

18.
We cloned a repetitive sequence to show RFLPs in the genome of Magnaporthe grisea, a fungal pathogen responsible for rice blast. As the sequence was 0.8 kb in length and dispersed in the genome, it was named MGSR1 (for Magnaporthe grisea short repeat 1). MGSR1 was conserved highly in the genome of rice pathogens, but poorly in the genome of pathogens of grasses other than rice. And the RFLPs, displayed with the sequence, could distinguish between clonal lineages in rice-pathogenic isolates. The nucleotide sequence showed the presence of an internal promoter of RNA polymerase III, a 3?-poly(T), and an 8-bp direct repeat in it.  相似文献   

19.
An unusually long repeated DNA sequence was identified in cloned DNA, three kb 3' to the human beta-globin gene. Other members of this repeated sequence family were isolated from a human genomic DNA library and characterized by Southern blotting techniques, electron microscopy, and solution hybridization. The copy located next to the beta-globin gene was found to be 6.4 +/- 0.2 kb long and continuous over that length. This repeated sequence family comprises about 1% of the human genome and contains 3000-4800 copies of moderate sequence divergence which are interspersed with other less-highly repeated DNA. The 6.4 kb repeated unit does not appear to be composed of any smaller tandemly repeated subunits, nor is it expressed at a high level in bone marrow cell RNA.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号