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Concerted evolution in protists: Recent homogenization of a polyubiquitin gene inTrichomonas vaginalis

✍ Scribed by Patrick J. Keeling; W. Ford Doolittle


Publisher
Springer
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Weight
756 KB
Volume
41
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-2844

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✦ Synopsis


Ubiquitin is a 76-amino-acid protein with a remarkably high degree of conservation between all known sequences. Ubiquitin genes are almost always multicopy in eukaryotes, and often are found as polyubiquitin genes fused tandem repeats which are coexpressed. Seventeen ubiquitin sequences from the amitochondrial protist Trichomonas vaginalis have been examined here, including an 11-repeat fragment of a polyubiquitin gene. These sequences reveal a number of interesting features that are not seen in other eukaryotes. The predicted amino acid sequences lack several universally conserved residues, and individual units do not always encode identical peptides as is usually the case. On the nucleotide level, these repeats are in general highly variable, but one region in the polyubiquitin is extremely homogeneous, with seven repeats absolutely identical. Such extended stretches of homogeneity have never been observed in ubiquitin genes and since substitutions are common in other coding units, it is likely that these repeats are the product of a very recent homogenization or amplification.