Bioinformatics analysis of plant orthologous introns: identification of an intronic tRNA-like sequence |
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Authors: | Evgeny E. Akkuratov Lorraine Walters Arnab Saha-Mandal Sushant Khandekar Erin Crawford Craig L. Zirbel Scott Leisner Ashwin Prakash Larisa Fedorova Alexei Fedorov |
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Affiliation: | 1. Faculty of Biology and Soil Science, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg 199034, Russia;2. Program in Bioinformatics and Proteomics/Genomics, University of Toledo, Health Science Campus, Toledo, OH 43614, USA;3. Department of Bioengineering, University of Toledo, Main Campus, Toledo, OH 43606, USA;4. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Toledo, Main Campus, Toledo, OH 43606, USA;5. Department of Medicine, University of Toledo, Health Science Campus, Toledo, OH 43614, USA;6. Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH 43403, USA |
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Abstract: | Orthologous introns have identical positions relative to the coding sequence in orthologous genes of different species. By analyzing the complete genomes of five plants we generated a database of 40,512 orthologous intron groups of dicotyledonous plants, 28,519 orthologous intron groups of angiosperms, and 15,726 of land plants (moss and angiosperms). Multiple sequence alignments of each orthologous intron group were obtained using the Mafft algorithm. The number of conserved regions in plant introns appeared to be hundreds of times fewer than that in mammals or vertebrates. Approximately three quarters of conserved intronic regions among angiosperms and dicots, in particular, correspond to alternatively-spliced exonic sequences. We registered only a handful of conserved intronic ncRNAs of flowering plants. However, the most evolutionarily conserved intronic region, which is ubiquitous for all plants examined in this study, including moss, possessed multiple structural features of tRNAs, which caused us to classify it as a putative tRNA-like ncRNA. Intronic sequences encoding tRNA-like structures are not unique to plants. Bioinformatics examination of the presence of tRNA inside introns revealed an unusually long-term association of four glycine tRNAs inside the Vac14 gene of fish, amniotes, and mammals. |
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Keywords: | nts, nucleotides CPIR-1, Conserved Plant Intronic Region |
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