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Drosophila virilis histone gene clusters lacking H1 coding segments
Authors:Leslie L. Domier  James J. Rivard  Linda M. Sabatini  Martin Blumenfeld
Affiliation:(1) Department of Genetics and Cell Biology, The University of Minnesota, 55108-1095 Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA;(2) Present address: Albert B. Chandler Medical Center, Department of Biochemistry, University of Kentucky, 40536-0084 Lexington, Kentucky, USA;(3) Present address: Laboratory of Genetics, The University of Wisconsin, 53706 Madison, Wisconsin, USA
Abstract: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:
$$overrightarrow {H2B} overleftarrow {H3} overrightarrow {H4} overleftarrow {H2A} $$
. 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.
Keywords:Histone genes  Histone H1  Gene organization  Nucleotide sequence  Drosophila virilis
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