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1.
We present a strategy for assembling a physical map of the genome of Drosophila melanogaster based on yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs). In this paper we report 500 YACs containing inserts of Drosophila DNA averaging 200 kb that have been assigned positions on the physical map by means of in situ hybridization with salivary gland chromosomes. The cloned DNA fragments have randomly sheared ends (DY clones) or ends generated by partial digestion with either NotI (N clones) or EcoRI (E clones). Relative to the euchromatic portion of the genome, the size distribution and genomic positions of the clones reveal no significant bias in the completeness or randomness of genome coverage. The 500 mapped euchromatic clones contain an aggregate of approximately 100 million base pairs of DNA, which is approximately one genome equivalent of Drosophila euchromatin.by W. Hennig  相似文献   

2.
A bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) library of Phytophthora infestans was constructed in a derivative of pBELOBACII that had been modified by adding a npt selectable marker gene for transforming P. infestans. A total library of 8 genome equivalents was generated and 16,128 clones with inserts averaging 75 kb (4.9 genome equivalents) were individually picked and stored as an arrayed library in microtiter plates. This coverage was confirmed by screening the library for 11 DNA loci by colony hybridization and by polymerase chain reaction of DNA pools. Transformation of P. infestans with BAC clones containing inserts of 93 to 135 kb was demonstrated. The efficiency of transformation with most BACs was noticeably higher than that with smaller plasmids. Detailed analyses of transformants obtained with a 102-kb BAC indicated that entire inserts were present in about one-quarter of the transformants.  相似文献   

3.
A multiple-hit bacteriophage P1 library containing DNA fragments from Drosophila melanogaster in the size range 75–100 kb was created and subjected to a preliminary evaluation for completeness, randomness, fidelity, and clone stability. This P1 library presently contains 3840 individual clones, or approximately two genome equivalents. The library was screened with a small set of unique-sequence test probes, and clones containing the sequences have been recovered. In situ hybridization with salivary gland chromosomes indicates that the clones originate from the site of the probe sequences in the genome, and filter hybridization of restriction digests suggests that the clones are not rearranged in comparison with the genomic sequences. Approximately 1.7% of the clones contain sequences that hybridize with ribosomal DNA. A small subset of these clones was tested for stability by examination of restriction fragments produced after repeated subculturing, and no evidence for instability was found. The P1 cloning system has general utility in molecular genetics and may provide an important intermediate level of resolution in physical mapping of the Drosophila genome.by W. Hennig  相似文献   

4.
Whereas the genomes of many organisms contain several nonallelic types of linker histone genes, one single histone H1 type is known in Drosophila melanogaster that occurs in about 100 copies per genome. Amplification of H1 gene sequences from genomic DNA of wild type strains of D. melanogaster from Oregon, Australia, and central Africa yielded numerous clones that all exhibited restriction patterns identical to each other and to those of the known H1 gene sequence. Nucleotide sequences encoding the evolutionarily variable domains of H1 were determined in two gene copies of strain Niamey from central Africa and were found to be identical to the known H1 sequence. Most likely therefore, the translated sequences of D. melanogaster H1 genes do not exhibit intragenomic or intergenomic variations. In contrast, three different histone H1 genes were isolated from D. virilis and found to encode proteins that differ remarkably from each other and from the H1 of D. melanogaster and D. hydei. About 40 copies of H1 genes are organized in the D. virilis genome with copies of core histone genes in gene quintets that were found to be located in band 25F of chromosome 2. Another type of histone gene cluster is present in about 15 copies per genome and contains a variable intergenic sequence instead of an H1 gene. The H1 heterogeneity in D. virilis may have arisen from higher recombination rates than occur near the H1 locus in D. melanogaster and might provide a basis for formation of different chromatin subtypes. Received: 2 March 2000 / Accepted: 1 June 2000  相似文献   

5.
Polytene chromosomes of D. melanogaster and D. virilis were hybridized in situ with 125I labeled mRNA isolated from polysomes of D. melanogaster tissue culture cells incubated at 37° C. 125I mRNA hybridized preferentially with subdivisions 87A and 87Cl of the D. melanogaster 3R chromosome; grains were also observed at regions 93D, 95D and over the chromocenter. A considerable cross hybridization of this mRNA with D. virilis polytene chromosomes was observed. The 29C region of the D. virilis second chromosome was the main site of hybridization. Significant grain numbers also appeared in region 20F of the same chromosome. The two regions mentioned belong to heat shock loci in the latter species. Based on label intensity we conclude that region 29C of D. virilis contains DNA sequences retaining molecular homology with those at subdivisions 87A and 87Cl of D. melanogaster. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed similar distributions of heat shock proteins in the two species studied.  相似文献   

6.
The analysis of patterns of genome evolution may help to evaluate the evolutionary forces that shape the composition and organization of the genome. Comparisons between the physical maps of divergent species can be used to identify conserved blocks of closely linked genes whose synteny is possibly under selective constraint. We have used in situ hybridization to determine the genomic position of 732 randomly selected clones from a bacteriophage P1 library of Drosophila virilis. The resulting map includes at least one clone in each of 69% of the subdivisions into which the D. virilis polytene chromosomes are divided. A subset of these clones was used to carry out a comparative physical analysis of chromosome 2 from D. virilis and from Drosophila montana. A number of discrepancies with the classical scenario of chromosome evolution were noted. The D. virilis P1 clones were also used to determine the physical relations between ten genes that are located in the X chromosome of Drosophila melanogaster between the markers crn (2F1) and omb (4C5-6). In this region, which is approximately 2 Mb in length, there have been at least six breakpoints since the divergence of the species, and six of the genes are found at widely scattered locations in the D. virilis X chromosome. However, a block of four functionally unrelated genes, including white, roughest, Notch, and dunce, seems to be conserved between the two species. Received: 1 March 1996 / Accepted: 8 February 1997  相似文献   

7.
Isolation and mapping of ribosomal RNA genes of Caulobacter crescentus   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Ribosomal DNA fragments of 1.0, 3.4, 3.7 and 6.1 kb2 produced by EcoRI digestion of the Caulobacter crescentus genome were identified by hybridization to a labeled ribosomal RNA probe. These genomic sequences were further characterized by the isolation of 13 hybrid λ Charon 4 phages with rDNA inserts, and two of the recombinant phages, Ch4Cc773 and Ch4Cc1880, were examined extensively. The Cc773 insert contains EcoRI fragments of 1.0 kb, 3.4 kb and 3.7 kb and the Cc1880 insert contains EcoRI fragments of 1.0 kb, 3.4 kb and 6.1 kb that hybridized to 32P-labeled rRNA. Thus, the two clones contain different DNA inserts which together account for all of the rDNA fragments detected in digests of the C. crescentus genome. Hybridization with isolated transfer RNA and individual rRNA species indicated that the arrangement of genes in both units is 16 S-spacer tRNA(s)-23 S-5 S, tRNA(s). Homology between the DNA inserts is largely restricted to the rRNA coding regions, which suggests that the two rDNA units are located in different regions of the chromosome. Results of quantitative hybridization experiments are most consistent with a single Cc1880 and Cc773 unit per genome equivalent of 2.7 × 109 daltons. The relatively simple organization of rDNA sequences in the C. crescentus chromosome compared to Escherichia coli is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Approximately 30–40% ofDrosophila virilis DNA complementary to clonedDrosophila histone genes is reduced to 3.4-kilobase-pair (kbp) segments by Bgl I or Bgl II digestion. The core histone genes of a 3.4-kbp Bgl II segment cloned in the plasmid pDv3/3.4 have the same order as theD. melanogaster core histone genes in the plasmid cDm500: . Nonetheless, pDv3/3.4 and cDm500 have different histone gene configurations: In pDv3/3.4, the region between the H2B and H3 genes contains 0.35 kbp and cannot encode histone H1; in cDm500, the region contains 2.0 kbp and encodes histone H1. The lack of an H1 gene between the H2B and H3 genes in 30–40% ofD. virilis histone gene clusters suggests that changes in histone gene arrays have occurred during the evolution ofDrosophila. The ancestors of modernDrosophila may have possessed multiple varieties of histone gene clusters, which were subsequently lost differentially in thevirilis andmelanogaster lineages. Alternatively, they may have possessed a single variety, which was rearranged during evolution. The H1 genes ofD. virilis andD. melanogaster did not cross-hybridize in vitro under conditions that maintain stable duplexes between DNAs that are 75% homologous. Consequently,D. virilis H1 genes could not be visualized by hybridization to an H1-specific probe and thus remain unidentified. Our observations suggest that the coding segments in the H1 genes ofD. virilis andD. melanogaster are >25% divergent. Our estimate of sequence divergence in the H1 genes ofD. virilis andD. melanogaster seems high until one considers that the coding sequences of cloned H1 genes from the closely related speciesD. melanogaster andD. simulans are 5% divergent.  相似文献   

9.
Bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) library is an important tool in genomic research. We constructed two libraries from the genomic DNA of grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon idellus) as a crucial part of the grass carp genome project. The libraries were constructed in the EcoRI and HindIII sites of the vector CopyControl pCC1BAC. The EcoRI library comprised 53,000 positive clones, and approximately 99.94% of the clones contained grass carp nuclear DNA inserts (average size, 139.7 kb) covering 7.4× haploid genome equivalents and 2% empty clones. Similarly, the HindIII library comprised 52,216 clones with approximately 99.82% probability of finding any genomic fragments containing single-copy genes; the average insert size was 121.5 kb with 2.8% insert-empty clones, thus providing genome coverage of 6.3× haploid genome equivalents of grass carp. We selected gene-specific probes for screening the target gene clones in the HindIII library. In all, we obtained 31 positive clones, which were identified for every gene, with an average of 6.2 BAC clones per gene probe. Thus, we succeeded in constructing the desired BAC libraries, which should provide an important foundation for future physical mapping and whole-genome sequencing in grass carp.  相似文献   

10.
Most higher plants have complex genomes containing large quantities of repetitive DNA interspersed with low-copy-number sequences. Many of these repetitive DNAs are mobile and have homology to RNAs in various cell types. This can make it difficult to identify the genes in a long chromosomal continuum. It was decided to use genic sequence conservation and grass genome co-linearity as tools for gene identification. A bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clone containing sorghum genomic DNA was selected using a maize Adh1 probe. The 165 kb sorghum BAC was tested for hybridization to a set of clones representing the contiguous 280 kb of DNA flanking maize Adh1. None of the repetitive maize DNAs hybridized, but most of the low-copy-number sequences did. A low-copy-number sequence that did cross-hybridize was found to be a gene, while one that did not was found to be a low-copy-number retrotransposon that was named Reina. Regions of cross-hybridization were co-linear between the two genomes, but closer together in the smaller sorghum genome. These results indicate that local genomic cross-referencing by hybridization of orthologous clones can be an efficient and rapid technique for gene identification and studies of genome organization.  相似文献   

11.
A bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) library of Phytophthora infestans was constructed in a derivative of pBELOBACII that had been modified by adding a npt selectable marker gene for transforming P. infestans. A total library of 8 genome equivalents was generated and 16,128 clones with inserts averaging 75 kb (4.9 genome equivalents) were individually picked and stored as an arrayed library in microtiter plates. This coverage was confirmed by screening the library for 11 DNA loci by colony hybridization and by polymerase chain reaction of DNA pools. Transformation of P. infestans with BAC clones containing inserts of 93 to 135 kb was demonstrated. The efficiency of transformation with most BACs was noticeably higher than that with smaller plasmids. Detailed analyses of transformants obtained with a 102-kb BAC indicated that entire inserts were present in about one-quarter of the transformants.  相似文献   

12.
FISH physical mapping with barley BAC clones   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) is a useful technique for physical mapping of genes, markers, and other single- or low-copy sequences. Since clones containing less than 10 kb of single-copy DNA do not reliably produce detectable signals with current FISH techniques in plants, a bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) partial library of barley was constructed and a FISH protocol for detecting unique sequences in barley BAC clones was developed. The library has a 95 kb average barley insert, representing about 20% of a barley genome. Two BAC clones containing hordein gene sequences were identified and partially characterized. FISH using these two BAC clones as probes showed specific hybridization signals near the end of the short arm of one pair of chromosomes. Restriction digests of these two BAC clones were compared with restriction patterns of genomic DNA; all fragments contained in the BAC clones corresponded to bands present in the genomic DNA, and the two BAC clones were not identical. The barley inserts contained in these two BAC clones were faithful copies of the genomic DNA. FISH with four BAC clones with inserts varying from 20 to 150 kb, showed distinct signals on paired chromatids. Physical mapping of single- or low-copy sequences in BAC clones by FISH will help to correlate the genetic and physical maps. FISH with BAC clones also provide an additional approach for saturating regions of interest with markers and for constructing contigs spanning those regions.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Clones carrying thewhite andtopaz eye color genes have been isolated from genomic DNA libraries of the blowflyLucilia cuprina using cloned DNA from the homologouswhite andscarlet genes. respectively, ofDrosophila melanogaster as probes. On the basis of hybridization studies using adjacent restriction fragments, homologous fragments were found to be colinear between the genes from the two species. The nucleotide sequence of a short region of thewhite gene ofL. cuprina has been determined, and the homology to the corresponding region ofD. melanogaster is 72%; at the derived amino acid level the homology is greater (84%) due to a marked difference in codon usage between the species. A major difference in genome organization between the two species is that whereas the DNA encompassing theD. melanogaster genes is free of repeated sequences. that encompassing theirL. cuprina counterparts contains substantial amounts of repeated sequences. This suggests that the genome ofL. cuprina is organized on the short period interspersion pattern. Repeated sequence DNA elements, which appear generally to be short (less than 1 kb) and which vary in repetitive frequency in the genome from greater than 104 copies to less than 102 copies, are found in at least two different locations in the clones carrying these genes. One type of repeat structure, found by sequencing, consists of tandemly repeating short sequences. Restriction site and restriction fragment length polymorphisms involving both thewhite andtopaz gene regions are found within and between populations ofL. cuprina.  相似文献   

14.
 Existing bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) vectors were modified to have unique EcoRI cloning sites. This provided an additional site for generating representative libraries from genomic DNA digested with a variety of enzymes. A BAC library of lettuce was constructed following the partial digestion of genomic DNA with HindIII or EcoRI. Several experimental parameters were investigated and optimized. The BAC library of over 50,000 clones, representing one to two genome equivalents, was constructed from six ligations; average insert sizes for each ligation varied between 92.5 and 142 kb with a combined average insert size of 111 kb. The library was screened with markers linked to disease resistance genes; this identified 134 BAC clones from four regions containing resistance genes. Hybridization with low-copy genomic sequences linked to resistance genes detected fewer clones than expected from previous estimates of genome size. The lack of hybridization to chloroplast and mitochondrial sequences demonstrated that the library was predominantly composed of nuclear DNA. The unique EcoRI site in the BAC vector should allow the integration of BAC cloning with other technologies that utilize EcoRI digestion, such as AFLPTM markers and RecA-assisted restriction endonuclease (RARE) cleavage, to clone specific large EcoRI fragments from genomic DNA. Received: 5 August 1996 / Accepted: 23 August 1996  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The analysis of the hexaploid wheat genome (Triticum aestivum L., 2n=6x=42) is hampered by its large size (16,974 Mb/1C) and presence of three homoeologous genomes (A, B and D). One of the possible strategies is a targeted approach based on subgenomic libraries of large DNA inserts. In this work, we purified by flow cytometry a total of 107 of three wheat D-genome chromosomes: 1D, 4D and 6D. Chromosomal DNA was partially digested with HindIII and used to prepare a specific bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) library. The library (designated as TA-subD) consists of 87,168 clones, with an average insert size of 85 kb. Among these clones, 53% had inserts larger than 100 kb, only 29% of inserts being shorter than 75 kb. The coverage was estimated to be 3.4-fold, giving a 96.5% probability of identifying a clone corresponding to any sequence on the three chromosomes. Specificity for chromosomes 1D, 4D and 6D was confirmed after screening the library pools with single-locus microsatellite markers. The screening indicated that the library was not biased and gave an estimated coverage of sixfold. This is the second report on BAC library construction from flow-sorted plant chromosomes, which confirms that dissecting of the complex wheat genome and preparation of subgenomic BAC libraries is possible. Their availability should facilitate the analysis of wheat genome structure and evolution, development of cytogenetic maps, construction of local physical maps and map-based cloning of agronomically important genes.  相似文献   

17.

Background

Chromosome four of Drosophila melanogaster, known as the dot chromosome, is largely heterochromatic, as shown by immunofluorescent staining with antibodies to heterochromatin protein 1 (HP1) and histone H3K9me. In contrast, the absence of HP1 and H3K9me from the dot chromosome in D. virilis suggests that this region is euchromatic. D. virilis diverged from D. melanogaster 40 to 60 million years ago.

Results

Here we describe finished sequencing and analysis of 11 fosmids hybridizing to the dot chromosome of D. virilis (372,650 base-pairs) and seven fosmids from major euchromatic chromosome arms (273,110 base-pairs). Most genes from the dot chromosome of D. melanogaster remain on the dot chromosome in D. virilis, but many inversions have occurred. The dot chromosomes of both species are similar to the major chromosome arms in gene density and coding density, but the dot chromosome genes of both species have larger introns. The D. virilis dot chromosome fosmids have a high repeat density (22.8%), similar to homologous regions of D. melanogaster (26.5%). There are, however, major differences in the representation of repetitive elements. Remnants of DNA transposons make up only 6.3% of the D. virilis dot chromosome fosmids, but 18.4% of the homologous regions from D. melanogaster; DINE-1 and 1360 elements are particularly enriched in D. melanogaster. Euchromatic domains on the major chromosomes in both species have very few DNA transposons (less than 0.4 %).

Conclusion

Combining these results with recent findings about RNAi, we suggest that specific repetitive elements, as well as density, play a role in determining higher-order chromatin packaging.  相似文献   

18.
A novel retrotransposon, aurora, containing 324 by long terminal repeats (LTRs) was detected in Drosophila melanogaster as a 5 kb insertion in the heterochromatic Stellate gene. This insertion causes a 5 bp duplication of the integration site. Southern analysis and in situ hybridization data show that all detectable copies of aurora are immobilized in the D. melanogaster heterochromatin. However, mobile copies of aurora were revealed in the cuchromatin of D. simulans. The element was also found in various species of the melanogaster subgroup and in the D. virilis genome.The nucleotide sequence data reported in this paper will appear in the EMBL, GenBank and DDBJ Nucleotide Sequence Databases under the accession numbers X70361 and X70362  相似文献   

19.
A bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) library was constructed from high-molecular-weight DNA isolated from young leaves of papaya (Carica papaya L.). This BAC library consists of 39168 clones from two separate ligation reactions. The average insert size of the library is 132 kb; 96.5% of the 18700 clones from the first ligation contained inserts that averaged 86 kb in size, 95.7% of the 20468 clones from the second ligation contained inserts that averaged 174 kb in size. Two sorghum chloroplast probes hybridized separately to the library and revealed a total of 504 chloroplast clones or 1.4% of the library. The entire BAC library was estimated to provide 13.7× papaya-genome equivalents, excluding the false-positive and chloroplast clones. High-density filters were made containing 94% or 36864 clones of the library with 12.7× papaya-genome equivalents. Eleven papaya-cDNA and ten Arabidopsis-cDNA probes detected an average of 22.8 BACs per probe in the library. Because of its relatively small genome (372 Mbp/1 C) and its ability to produce ripe fruit 9 to 15 months after planting, papaya shows promise as a model plant for studying genes that affect fruiting characters. A rapid approach to locating fruit-controlling genes will be to assemble a physical map based on BAC contigs to which ESTs have hybridized. A physical map of the papaya genome will significantly enhance our capacity to clone and manipulate genes of economic importance. Received: 11 April 2000 / Accepted: 28 July 2000  相似文献   

20.
Two bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) libraries were constructed from an inbred line derived from a cultivar of cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.). Intact nuclei were isolated and embedded in agarose plugs, and high-molecular-weight DNA was subsequently partially digested with BamHI or EcoRI. Ligation of double size-selected DNA fragments with the pECBAC1 vector yielded two libraries containing 23,040 BamHI and 18,432 EcoRI clones. The average BamHI and EcoRI insert sizes were estimated to be 107.0 kb and 100.8 kb, respectively, and BAC clones lacking inserts were 1.3% and 14.5% in the BamHI and EcoRI libraries, respectively. The two libraries together represent approximately 10.8 haploid cucumber genomes. Hybridization with a C0t-1 DNA probe revealed that approximately 36% of BAC clones likely carried repetitive sequence-enriched DNA. The frequencies of BAC clones that carry chloroplast or mitochondrial DNA range from 0.20% to 0.47%. Four sequence-characterized amplified region (SCAR), four simple sequence repeat, and an randomly amplified polymorphic DNA marker linked with yield component quantitative trait loci were used either as probes to hybridize high-density colony filters prepared from both libraries or as primers to screen an ordered array of pooled BAC DNA prepared from the BamHI library. Positive BAC clones were identified in predicted numbers, as screening by polymerase chain reaction amplification effectively overcame the problems associated with an overabundance of positives from hybridization with two SCAR markers. The BAC clones identified herein that are linked to the de (determinate habit) and F (gynoecy) locus will be useful for positional cloning of these economically important genes. These BAC libraries will also facilitate physical mapping of the cucumber genome and comparative genome analyses with other plant species.  相似文献   

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