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The genes coding for two different human H1 histones were isolated, and the primary structures were deduced from the nucleotide sequences. The genes differ from each other and from any other vertebrate H1 structure described until now. The differences occur mainly within the N- and C-terminal H1 domains, whereas the central part of the protein is highly conserved. Within the flanking domains, however, some sequence elements are shared by different H1 subtype genes. An octapeptide, which has been described in C-terminal domains of most H1 histones, is found in both H1 subtypes. The nucleotide sequences of the flanking portions of both H1 genes show conserved motifs at established regulatory sites, but otherwise these 3' and 5' noncoding sequences of both genes differ substantially.  相似文献   

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T J Liu  L Liu    W F Marzluff 《Nucleic acids research》1987,15(7):3023-3039
The sequence of five mouse histone genes, two H2a and three H2b genes on chromosome 13 has been determined. The three H2b genes all code for different proteins, each differing in two amino acids from the others. The H2b specific elements present 5' to H2b genes from other species are present in all three mouse H2b genes. All three H2b genes are expressed in the same relative amounts in three different mouse cell lines and fetal mice. The H2b gene with the H2b specific sequence closest to the TATAA sequence is expressed in the highest amount. One of the H2a genes lacks the first 9 amino acids, the promoter region, the last 3 amino acids and contains an altered 3' end sequence. Despite these multiple defects, there is only one nucleotide change between the two H2a genes from codon 9 to 126. This indicates that a recent gene conversion has occurred between these two genes. The similarity of the nucleotide sequences in the coding regions of mouse histone genes is probably due to gene conversion events targeted precisely at the coding region.  相似文献   

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We have determined the nucleotide sequence of core histone genes and flanking regions from two of approximately 11 different genomic histone clusters of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Four histone genes from one cluster (H3, H4, H2B, H2A) and two histone genes from another (H4 and H2A) were analyzed. The predicted amino acid sequences of the two H4 and H2A proteins from the two clusters are identical, whereas the nucleotide sequences of the genes have diverged 9% (H2A) and 12% (H4). Flanking sequences, which are mostly not similar, were compared to identify putative regulatory elements. A conserved sequence of 34 base-pairs is present 19 to 42 nucleotides 3' of the termination codon of all the genes. Within the conserved sequence is a 16-base dyad sequence homologous to the one typically found at the 3' end of histone genes from higher eukaryotes. The C. elegans core histone genes are organized as divergently transcribed pairs of H3-H4 and H2A-H2B and contain 5' conserved sequence elements in the shared spacer regions. One of the sequence elements, 5' CTCCNCCTNCCCACCNCANA 3', is located immediately upstream from the canonical TATA homology of each gene. Another sequence element, 5' CTGCGGGGACACATNT 3', is present in the spacer of each heterotypic pair. These two 5' conserved sequences are not present in the promoter region of histone genes from other organisms, where 5' conserved sequences are usually different for each histone class. They are also not found in non-histone genes of C. elegans. These putative regulatory sequences of C. elegans core histone genes are similar to the regulatory elements of both higher and lower eukaryotes. The coding regions of the genes and the 3' regulatory sequences are similar to those of higher eukaryotes, whereas the presence of common 5' sequence elements upstream from genes of different histone classes is similar to histone promoter elements in yeast.  相似文献   

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Two human H1 histone genes, termed H1.3 and H1.4, were isolated from two cosmid clones. The H1.4 gene is associated with an H2B gene, whereas genes coding for all four core histones are located in the vicinity of the H1.3 gene. This cluster arrangement was found both in the two cosmid clones and on overlapping bacteriophage clones isolated from an EMBL3 library. In continuation of our previous analysis of two human H1 genes, this analysis raises the number of completely sequenced H1 histone genes within clusters of core histone genes to four.  相似文献   

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Histone H4 and H2B genes in rainbow trout (Salmo gairdnerii)   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Summary The complete nucleotide sequence of the 3.0-kb BamH I-Sst I restriction fragment contained within the rainbow trout genomic clone TH2 has been determined. This region contains the rainbow trout H4 and H2B histone genes and 5 and 3 flanking and spacer sequences, and represents the 5 half of the histone-gene cluster; the remaining half has been characterized previously. The genes are uninterrupted, and are transcribed from the same strand. The protein sequence of H4, as determined from the nucleic acid sequence, is the same as that derived for other vertebrate H4 proteins, although comparison of nucleotide sequences shows a great deal of sequence divergence, especially in the third base position. The amino acid sequence of H2B, though largely homologous to those of other vertebrate H2B proteins, displays some characteristic differences in primary structure. Consensus sequences noted in many other eukaryotic genes, as well as histone-specific consensus sequences, have been identified. An unusual feature of the spacer region between the H4 and H2B genes is the presence of a duplicated sequence 87 bp in length. The 5 and 3 ends of each repeat are complementary, and each repeat contains smaller repeated sequences internally, as well as a possible cruciform structure.  相似文献   

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We have analyzed the histone genes from the sea urchin Lytechinus pictus. Examination of native DNA from individuals reveals four major Eco RI restriction endonuclease histone gene DNA fragments which have been labeled A (6.0 kb), B (4.1 kb), C (3.1 kb) and D (1.2 kb). The fragments A, B and C have been cloned into E. coli plasmids (pLpA, pLpB and pLpC). These histone gene fragments display length and sequence heterogeneity in different individuals. The plasmid pLpA contains the coding regions for H1, H4, H2B and H3 histones, and we determined that the DNA fragment D is tandem to A in native DNA and that it contains the H2A gene. The plasmids pLpB and pLpC contain the histone genes H2A-H1-H4 and H2B-H3, respectively, and together contain the sequences for the five major histones. Restriction analysis of native L. pictus DNA reveals that B and C are tandem to each other but not intermingled with the A-D-type repeat units, and are thus in separate clusters with a repeat length of 7.2 kb. Since the two cluster types do not segregate, they are not alleles. Hybridization of histone mRNA to exonuclease III-digested linear DNA demonstrated an identical polarity of the histone genes in the A-D- and B-C-type repeat units. This result revealed that the L. pictus histone genes have a polarity which is the same as other sea urchin histone genes examined to date—that is, 3′ H1-H4-H2B-H3-H2A 5′. Restriction endonuclease cleavage patterns of the cloned segments indicate that considerable sequence heterogeneity exists between the two types of histone gene repeat units.  相似文献   

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A repeating unit of the histone gene cluster from Drosophila simulans containing the H1, H2A, H2B and H4 genes (the H3 gene region has already been analyzed) was cloned and analyzed. A nucleotide sequence of about 4.6 kbp was determined to study the nucleotide divergence and molecular evolution of the histone gene cluster. Comparison of the structure and nucleotide sequence with those of Drosophila melanogaster showed that the four histone genes were located at identical positions and in the same directions. The proportion of different nucleotide sites was 6.3% in total. The amino acid sequence of H1 was divergent, with a 5.1% difference. However, no amino acid change has been observed for the other three histone proteins. Analysis of the GC contents and the base substitution patterns in the two lineages, D. melanogaster and D. simulans, with a common ancestor showed the following. 1) A strong negative correlation was found between the GC content and the nucleotide divergence in the whole repeating unit. 2) The mode of molecular evolution previously found for the H3 gene was also observed for the whole repeating unit of histone genes; the nucleotide substitutions were stationary in the 3' and spacer regions, and there was a directional change of the codon usage to the AT-rich codons. 3) No distinct difference in the mode or pattern of molecular evolution was detected for the histone gene repeating unit in the D. melanogaster and D. simulans lineages. These results suggest that selectional pressure for the coding regions of histones, which eliminate A and T, is less effective in the D. melanogaster and D. simulans lineages than in the other GC-rich species.  相似文献   

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We have determined the nucleotide sequence of sea urchin (Lytechinus pictus) late stage H3 and H4 histone genes contained on the clone pLpH3H4 -21 and of the early stage H3 gene contained on the plasmid pLpA . Comparison of these differentially regulated histone genes with each other and with other L. pictus late and early stage histone H3 and H4 genes previously sequenced confirms that members of each histone gene family (early and late) are more homologous to each other than they are to members of other histone gene families. The spacer regions between two late H3-H4 gene pairs on the clones pLpH3H4 -19 and pLpH3H4 -21 have diverged to the point where they are no longer homologous. However, comparative analysis of the 5' flanking DNA has identified a sequence 5'C-T-C-A-T-G-T-A-T-T3' upstream of both late H4 genes and another, 5'A-G-A-T-T-C-A3', upstream of both H3 genes. Except for a short conserved sequence near the initiation codon, the transcribed 5' leaders of the late mRNAs differ in length and sequence in the two non-allelic late histone gene pairs. This divergence contrasts with the 95 to 96% conservation found between late histone gene coding sequences. The results suggest that there is intergenic exchange in the germline among members of the late histone gene family and that the unit of exchange is the individual gene rather than the heterotypic dimer which includes the common spacer DNA.  相似文献   

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