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Endogenous retrovirus-like sequences homologous to intracisternal type-A particle (IAP) genes, which are present in the inbred mouse (Mus musculus) genome, were cloned from a Syrian hamster gene library. A typical hamster IAP gene was 7 kb long and segments homologous to long terminal repeat (IAP) sequences present in Mus musculus IAP genes were located at both ends of the gene. Contrary to the pattern found in the Mus musculus IAP genes, the organization of the cloned hamster IAP genes was not markedly polymorphic and deletion was not observed among these cloned genes. A sequence about 0.8 kb long and located close to the 3' end of the hamster IAP gene was well conserved in both IAP gene families, although they showed less overall homology with one another. The reiteration frequency of the hamster IAP genes was calculated to be 950 copies per haploid genome. Since such IAP genes with the above properties were not found in the genome of the Chinese hamster, whose progenitors diverged from those of the Syrian hamster about 7.5 Myr ago, the integration of a huge number of Syrian hamster IAP genes must have occurred subsequent to such divergence.  相似文献   

3.
Metaphase chromosomes of Syrian hamster and BALB/c mice were hybridized in situ with radiolabeled probes derived from cloned intracisternal A-particle (IAP) genes of the corresponding species. The DNAs of these species are known to contain about 900 and 1,000 copies, respectively, of the retrovirus-like IAP sequence elements per haploid genome. Multiple IAP sequences were found on all chromosomes of both hamster and mouse. In the hamster, more than half of the IAP sequences were located in regions of non-centromeric constitutive heterochromatin, at an average concentration per unit chromosome length 5 times greater than in the euchromatic regions. The other dispersed sequences showed marked local variations in concentration along the chromosome lengths; both discrete foci and large grain clusters were observed as well as regions apparently lacking IAP sequences. Within the resolution of the techniques, IAP sequences appeared to be more evenly distributed over the mouse chromosomes; however, some prominent variations in concentration were seen. The number of potentially active IAP genes in the Syrian hamster, and by extension in the mouse, may be restricted by the preferential location of IAP sequences in genetically inert regions of the genome.  相似文献   

4.
Intracisternal A-particle (IAP) elements are present in multiple copies in the mouse and other rodent genomes. The bulk of this sequence family in Mus musculus consists of 7 Kb long elements, but the majority of IAP sequences involved in known transpositions have been deleted forms. The present study describes a subset of deleted IAP sequences (type II IAP) characterized by insertion of a particular short sequence element (AIIins). AIIins are interspersed and the majority occur as part of the type II IAP elements in the mouse genome. AIIins sequences are absent or in low copy number outside Mus musculus. We have isolated clones containing AIIins from a mouse genomic DNA library and have sequenced three isolates of AIIins and their surrounding IAP sequences to define the detailed structure of type II elements. AIIins are 272, 268 and 264 bp long and 90% homologous in sequence. They are bracketed by 9 bp duplications, suggesting they may be inserted elements. A 75 bp region containing a core enhancer sequence is repeated at the 5' end in type II IAP elements. Insertion into the IAP genome, with potential to encode an integrase function, may have played a role in the amplification of AIIins.  相似文献   

5.
Identifier (ID) elements are members of a family of short interspersed nuclear elements (SINEs) in rodents. We investigated the genomic organization and chromosomal distribution of the ID elements in the rat, mouse and Chinese hamster. Southern blot hybridization analysis revealed that the ID elements are widespread in the rat genome, but concentrated in the mouse and Chinese hamster genomes, and that the copy of ID elements in the rat is about 5 times and 50 times that in the mouse and Chinese hamster, respectively. FISH analysis showed that the ID elements are predominantly distributed in the R-band regions of rat chromosomes. In mouse and Chinese hamster chromosomes, no specific distribution pattern of the ID elements was found. Furthermore, we found a distinct group of derivative ID elements in the rat, which contain partially repeated ID core domains, by PCR amplification using an ID core sequence. Such derivatives were not found in either the mouse or Chinese hamster. These findings suggest that explosive amplification of the ID elements in the rat has been accompanied by the occurrence of derivative ID elements and a predominant localization to the R-band regions. Similar associations found in the Alu family, one of the human SINEs, allow us to speculate that the rat ID elements and the human Alu family have analogous functions in chromosomal organization.  相似文献   

6.
Retrovirus like sequences homologous to mouse IAP are present in Chinese hamster genome (Lueders K.K. and Kuff, E.L., 1981, 1983, Servenay et al., 1990). Murine IAP long terminal repeats (LTRs) can function as effective promoters in different cell types (Horowitz M. et al., 1984, Howe, C.C. et al., 1986). Thus CHO IAP sequences could act as retrotransposons in the cellular genome, and in this way affect the expression of other genes at the target sites. We had sequenced previously a Chinese hamster IAP genomic region corresponding mainly to the gag gene and including 57 nucleotides of U5 5' LTR (Servenay et al., 1988). In this paper, we present the 5' LTR complete nucleotide sequence of the Chinese hamster IAP element and its comparison with those of mouse and Syrian hamster.  相似文献   

7.
We have isolated and characterized a family of interspersed repetitive elements which make up about 1% of the mouse genome. The elements represent a group of homologous but non-identical units about 400 bp in length. Individual members of the family show considerable divergence from one another. The spacial relationships between members of the family and a number of other identified mouse sequences including structural genes have been determined; these elements are found on the 5' as well as 3' sides of various genes at distances ranging from less than 1 to 7.5 kilobases (Kb). The sequences are present in the DNA of all species of Mus. Related sequences are present in the rat genome at a repetition frequency similar to that in the mouse genome. A partial sequence of one member of the family is presented.  相似文献   

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We isolated DNA clones of intracisternal A-particle (IAP) genes from the genome of an Asian wild mouse, Mus caroli. A typical M. caroli IAP gene was 6.5 kilobase pairs in length and had long terminal repeat (LTR) sequences at both ends. The size of the LTR was 345 base pairs in clone L20, and two LTRs at both ends of this clone were linked to directly repeating cellular sequences of 6 base pairs. Each LTR possessed most of the structural features commonly associated with the retrovirus LTR. The restriction map of the M. caroli IAP gene resembled that of Mus musculus, although the M. caroli IAP gene was 0.4 kilobase pairs shorter than the M. musculus IAP gene in two regions. Sequence homology between the M. caroli and M. musculus IAP LTRs was calculated as about 80%, whereas the LTR sequence of the Syrian hamster IAP gene was about 60% homologous to the M. caroli LTR. The reiteration frequency of the M. caroli IAP genes was estimated as 200 to 400 copies per haploid genome, which is at least 10 times the reported value. These results suggest that the IAP genes observed in the genus Mus are present in multiple copies with structures closely resembling the integrated retrovirus gene.  相似文献   

10.
We report here the nucleotide sequence of a full-length Chinese hamster genomic proviral element, CHIAP34. CHIAP34 is 6,403 bp long with long terminal repeats of 311 bp at each end. The genetic organization of CHIAP34 was determined by comparison with intracisternal A particle (IAP) genetic elements from the mouse and Syrian hamster. Extensive homology at the nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequence levels was observed between CHIAP34 and the mouse and Syrian hamster IAP elements. CHIAP34 may represent a defective Chinese hamster IAP genetic element. The gag gene consists of 837 codons, of which 558 codons are in a single long open reading frame followed by several frameshifts. The pol gene begins with a -1 frameshift and consists of a long open reading frame of 753 codons followed by a short open reading frame of 103 codons. The putative env region contains multiple termination codons in all reading frames. CHIAP34 is representative of the predominant retroviral elements in the Chinese hamster ovary cell genome present at around 80 copies per haploid genome.  相似文献   

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EcoRI digestion of total mouse DNA yields a prominant 1.3 kb fragment amounting to between 1 and 2% of the mouse genome. The majority of the 1.3 kb EcoRI fragments have a single Bg1II site 800 bp from one end. This EcoRI-Bg1II sequence family shows HindIII and HaeIII sequence heterogeneity. We have cloned representatives of the EcoRI-Bg1II gene family in Charon 16A and studied their structure and organization within the genome. The cloned 1.3 kb fragments show the expected restriction enzyme patterns as well as additional heterogeneity. Representatives of the EcoRI-Bg1II sequence family were found to be interspersed throughout the mouse genome as judged by CsCl density gradient centrifugation experiments. Family members were also found to be organized in higher order repeating units. Homologous sequences were also found in other rodent species including rat and Chinese hamster. Cross hybridization between a cloned 1.3 kb mouse fragment and a cloned CHO repeated sequence is of special interest since the latter has been shown to contain sequences homologous to the Human A1uI family by nucleotide sequencing.  相似文献   

13.
The retrotransposon-like elements of the intracisternal A-particle (IAP) sequences occur in about 900 copies per haploid hamster cell genome. By applying the fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) technique and four different, cloned segments of the IAP element as hybridization probes, these elements were found to be distributed in specific patterns over many of the 44 hamster chromosomes. The hybridization patterns were very similar regardless of whether all four probes or only the IAPI probe carrying the long terminal repeat (LTR) region were used. The IAP elements were found most abundantly, though not exclusively, on the short arms of at least 12 of the autosomes. Of the sex chromosomes, the shorter Y chromosome was stained on both arms, and the X chromosome on one arm by the IAP probes. Primary Syrian hamster cells, the established Syrian hamster cell line BHK21, and the adenovirus type 12 (Ad12)-transformed BHK21 cell line T637 yielded very similar results. In Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) or 3T3 mouse cells, signals could not be elicited by FISH using the Syrian hamster IAP probes. On Southern blots, the DNAs from these cell lines hybridized very weakly, if at all, to the IAP sequences. Thus, IAP sequences were retroposed after Syrian hamster and mouse or Syrian and Chinese hamsters had diverged in evolution.  相似文献   

14.
The class I gene products of the Syrian hamster major histocompatibility complex are unique in that they lack functionally detectable polymorphism. Mouse cDNA and hamster genomic probes were used to analyze the hamster class I gene family using genomic Southern hybridization. These studies revealed that the hamster possesses a complex class I multigene family and that it shares extensive sequence homology with the corresponding mouse sequences. Unlike the mouse, however, the Syrian hamster demonstrates only limited restriction endonuclease polymorphism in these genes. These results suggest that the lack of detectable polymorphism in this species is directly related to limited DNA polymorphism. The data presented here support the hypothesis that this species has undergone an evolutionary bottleneck, i. e., that all surviving members of the species arose from a limited number of progenitors.Abbreviations used in this paper MHC major histocompatibility complex - MLR mixed lymphocyte reactions - SSC saline sodium citrate - kbp kilobase pairs - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

15.
The reassociation kinetics of DNA fragments obtained from the major components of the mouse and human genomes (recently isolated in our laboratory) have been investigated. It has been found that the relative amounts of interspersed repeated and unique sequences strikingly differ in the different major components of each genome and in the corresponding major components of the two genomes. Furthermore, within each major component, the interspersed repeated and unique sequences do not differ in dG + dC contents. These findings lead to the general conclusion that the sequence organization of mammalian genomes is not uniform in different chromosomal regions and that it exhibits remarkable variations in different mammals.  相似文献   

16.
Hyperchromicity, S1 nuclease digestion, and reassociation studies of Syrian hamster repetitive DNA have led to novel conclusions about repetitive sequence organization. Re-evaluation of the hyperchromicity techniques commonly used to determine the average length of genomic repetitive DNA regions indicates that both the extent of reassociation, and the possibility of non-random elution of hyperpolymers from hydroxyapatite can radically affect the observed hyperchromicity. An alternative interpretation of hyperchromicity experiments, presented here, suggests that the average length of repetitive regions in Syrian hamster DNA must be greater than 4000 nucleotides.S1 nuclease digestion of reassociated 3200 nucleotide Syrian hamster repetitive DNA, on the other hand, yields both long (>2000 nucleotides) and short (300 nucleotides) resistant DNA duplexes. Calculations indicate that the observed mass of short nuclease-resistant duplexes (>60%) is too large to have arisen only from independent short repetitive DNA sequences alternating with non-repetitive regions. Reassociation experiments using long and short S1 nuclease-resistant duplexes as driver DNA indicate that all repetitive sequences are present in both fractions at approximately the same concentration. Isolated long S1 nuclease-resistant duplexes, after denaturation, renaturation, and a second S1 nuclease digestion, again produce both long and short DNA duplexes. Reassociation experiments indicate that all repetitive DNA sequences are still present in the “recycled” long S1 nuclease-resistant duplexes. These experiments imply that many of the short S1 nuclease-resistant repetitive DNA duplex regions present in reassociated Syrian hamster DNA were initially present in the genome as part of longer repetitive sequence blocks. This conclusion suggests that the majority of “short” repetitive regions in Syrian hamster DNA are organized into scrambled tandem clusters rather than being individually interspersed with non-repetitive regions.  相似文献   

17.
Organization of the Euplotes crassus micronuclear genome   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Euplotes crassus, like other hypotrichous ciliated protozoa, eliminates most of its micronuclear chromosomal DNA in the process of forming the small linear DNA molecules that comprise the macronuclear genome. By characterizing randomly selected lambda phage clones of E. crassus micronuclear DNA, we have determined the distribution of repetitive and unique sequences and the arrangement of macronuclear genes relative to eliminated DNA. This allows us to compare the E. crassus micronuclear genome organization to that of another distantly related hypotrichous ciliate, Oxytricha nova. The clones from E. crassus segregate into three prevalent classes: those containing primarily eliminated repetitive DNA (Class I); those containing macronuclear genes in addition to repetitive sequences (Class II); and those containing only eliminated unique sequence DNA (Class III). All of the repetitive sequences in these clones belong to the same highly abundant repetitive element family. Our results demonstrate that the sequence organization of the E. crassus and O. nova micronuclear genomes is related in that the macronuclear genes are clustered together in the micronuclear genome and the eliminated unique sequences occur in long stretches that are uninterrupted by repetitive sequences. In both organisms a single repetitive element family comprises the majority of the eliminated interspersed middle repetitive DNA and appears to be preferentially associated with the macronuclear sequence clusters. The similarities in the sequence organization in these two organisms suggest that clustering of macronuclear genes plays a role in the chromosome fragmentation process.  相似文献   

18.
Temporal replication of an interspersed repeated sequence of mouse DNA   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The temporal replication profile of an interspersed repeated DNA sequence (variously named MIF-1, Bam and L1Md) of mouse was determined by isotope analysis of a resolvable restriction fragment differentially labeled in pre- and post-synchrony cultures. While the temporal replication profile of the fragment was similar to that of total nuclear DNA, an average time lag of about 20 min was evident for this interspersed repeated family (called Bam in this paper). In addition, the sequence organisation of Bam homologues were examined for the separable early- and late-replication domains of the hamster genome. The data suggest that late-replicating domains of the rodent genome are slightly enriched in Bam homologous sequences. Furthermore, this repeated sequence family has different sequence organisations in the separable replication domains of hamster.  相似文献   

19.
4.5SH RNA is a 94-nt small RNA with unknown function. This RNA is known to be present in the mouse, rat, and hamster cells; however, it is not found in human, rabbit, and chicken. In the mouse genome, the 4.5SH RNA gene is a part of a long (4.2 kb) tandem repeat ( approximately 800 copies) unit. Here, we found that 4.5SH RNA genes are present only in rodents of six families that comprise the Myodonta clade: Muridae, Cricetidae, Spalacidae, Rhizomyidae, Zapodidae, and Dipodidae. The analysis of complementary DNA derived from the rodents of these families showed general evolutionary conservation of 4.5SH RNA and some intraspecific heterogeneity of these RNA molecules. 4.5SH RNA genes in the Norway rat, mole rat, hamster and jerboa genomes are included in the repeated sequences. In the jerboa genome these repeats are 4.0-kb long and arranged tandemly, similar to the corresponding arrangements in the mouse and rat genomic DNA. Sequencing of the rat and jerboa DNA repeats containing 4.5SH RNA genes showed fast evolution of the gene-flanking sequences. The repeat sequences of the distantly related rodents (mouse and rat vs. jerboa) have no apparent similarity except for the 4.5SH RNA gene itself. Conservation of the 4.5SH RNA gene nucleotide sequence indicates that this RNA is likely to be under selection pressure and, thus, may have a function. The repeats from the different rodents have similar lengths and contain many simple short repeats. The data obtained suggest that long insertions, deletions, and simple sequence amplifications significantly contribute in the evolution of the repeats containing 4.5SH RNA genes. The 4.5SH RNA gene seems to have originated 50-85 MYA in a Myodonta ancestor from a copy of the B1 short interspersed element. The amplification of the gene with the flanking sequences could result from the supposed cellular requirement of the intensive synthesis of 4.5SH RNA. Further Myodonta evolution led to dramatic changes of the repeat sequences in every lineage with the conservation of the 4.5SH RNA genes only. This gene, like some other relatively recently originated genes, could be a useful model for studying generation and evolution of non-protein-coding genes.  相似文献   

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