Three/3-type early chorion gene copies (6F6.1, 6F6.2, and 6F6.3) are dispersed in the late region of chorion locus Ch 1-2. Detailed analysis of the 5'-flanking region and the intron of 6F6.1 shows that they contain sequences that are homologous to Bombyx mori Bml repeat elements. Interestingly, the
Sequence analysis of a small early chorion gene subfamily interspersed within the late gene locus inBombyx mori
โ Scribed by Lara Kravariti; Rena Lecanidou; George C. Rodakis
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 954 KB
- Volume
- 41
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-2844
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
A comprehensive sequence analysis of three early chorion genes (6F6.1, 6F6.2, 6F6.3) which form a small subfamily is presented. Two main features characterize this subfamily: (1) the 6F6 gene copies are p-branch genes and, unlike typical chorion genes which are organized in divergent gene pairs, they are unpaired, and (2) they are not clustered in genetic locus Ch3 but are dispersed in Chl-2, which is about 3 to 4 centiMorgans away and contains middle and late chorion genes. Sequence comparisons show that members of this subfamily exhibit high identity values in their major coding region (94-96%) and that similarities also extend, but to a lesser degree, into their noncoding regions. The putative 6F6 promoter regions have no significant similarities with the corresponding regions of other early [~-genes but quite surprisingly share common elements with middle and late genes. The main difference among the 6F6 gene introns is the presence of inserted sequences: the insert into 6F6.2 ("IR"; 248 bp) is flanked by a 102-103-bp inverted repeat, while those into 6F6.1 ("FIB"; 184 bp) and 6F6.3 ("HOPE"; 951 bp) are carried by a partial Bml element. HOPE has features of a non-LTR retrotransposable element. Preliminary experiments indicate that the copy number of IR and HOPE in the Bombyx mori genome is about 5,000 and 20,000, respectively. The great similarity of 6F6 genes cannot be accounted for by selective pressure but rather appears to be the result of gene-conversion-like events, which are supposed to operate frequently in middle and late chorion genes but not in other known early p-genes. Using the Correspondence to: G.C. Rodakis relative position and orientation of the 6F6 gene copies, it is possible to propose an evolutionary scheme for the formation of chorion locus Chl-2.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES