scholarly journals Analysis of Recombination Sites Within the Maize waxy Locus

Genetics ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 147 (2) ◽  
pp. 815-821 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ron J Okagaki ◽  
Clifford F Weil

Genetic fine structure analysis of the maize wx locus has determined that the ratio of genetic to physical distance within wx was one to two orders of magnitude higher than the average for the maize genome. Similar results have been found at other maize loci. In this study, we examined several mechanisms that could account for this pattern. First, crossovers in two other maize genes resolve preferentially at specific sites. By mapping exchanges between wx-B1 and wx-I relative to a polymorphic SstI site, we found no evidence for such a hotspot at wx. Second, deletion of promoter sequences from wx alleles had little effect on recombination frequencies, in contrast to results in yeast where promoter sequences are important for initiating recombination in some genes. Third, high levels of insertion polymorphism may suppress intergenic recombination. However, the presence of a 2-kb Ds element 470 bp upstream of the wx transcription start site did not further suppress recombination between Ds insertions in nearby wx sequences. Thus, none of these mechanisms is sufficient to explain the difference between intergenic and intragenic recombination rates at wx.

Genetics ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 79 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-44
Author(s):  
Oliver E Nelson

ABSTRACT The effect of heterozygosity for structural rearrangements on recombination between two wx heteroalleles (C and 90) and the pattern of flanking markers in the resultant Wx gametes has been examined. The rearrangements are Tp9, an insertional translocation in which a segment of chromosome 3 has been inserted into the short arm of chromosome 9 close to the wx locus; In9a, a long pericentric inversion with wx in the inverted segment; and Rearr 9, a complex rearrangement of chromosome 9. Heterozygosity for rearrangements decreases the frequency of Wx gametes to varying degrees.—Heterozygosity for Tp9 enhances the proportion of Wx gametes that are apparent convertants and allows the conclusion that such gametes do not normally arise from an exchange in the wx locus plus a second exchange distal to wx. Heterozygosity for In9a markedly decreases the frequency of Wx gametes that are recombinant for outside markers but does not decrease the frequency of convertants.—Heterozygosity for Rearr 9 permits a low frequency of Wx gametes, all of which are apparent convertants.—A high proportion of the convertants have the flanking markers that entered the cross with C so recombination is polarized in normal homologs and in heterozygotes for all rearrangements.


2016 ◽  
Vol 27 (12) ◽  
pp. 1650141 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Verma ◽  
N. A. M. Araújo ◽  
J. Nagler ◽  
J. S. Andrade ◽  
H. J. Herrmann

We propose a probabilistic growth model for transport networks which employs a balance between popularity of nodes and the physical distance between nodes. By comparing the degree of each node in the model network and the World Airline Network (WAN), we observe that the difference between the two is minimized for [Formula: see text]. Interestingly, this is the value obtained for the node–node correlation function in the WAN. This suggests that our model explains quite well the growth of airline networks.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 4249-4249
Author(s):  
Mario-Antoine Dicato ◽  
Garry Mahon

Abstract The human genome has been estimated to contain tens of thousands of genes. Of these, the promoters have been experimentally verified for almost two thousand. We have examined the DNA sequences just up-stream of the transcription start site, a region which includes the TATA box. Genetic control sites, such as promoters, often have a characteristic consensus sequence, but the variation about a given consensus sequence has received little attention. Sequence variations may be related to functional differences amongst the control sites. Principal components analysis has been chosen because of its generality and the variety of phenomena which it reveals. Promoter sequences were considered because of the large number available and their importance in gene expression. The sequences of the 1977 promoters recognised by human RNA polymerase II were obtained from the Eukaryotic Promoter Database. Many of these promoters are of interest in oncology and the database includes sequences for growth factors (e.g. GM-CSF, interleukins), oncogenes and tumour viruses among others. Sub-sequences of 25 bases centred on position −13 relative to the transcription start site were extracted. Two bits were used to encode each base (a=11, c=00, g=10 and t=01) and the covariance matrix of the resulting 50 variables was determined. The eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the covariance matrix were calculated. All calculations were carried out by computer using MS-Excel and SYSTAT 11. The eigenvalues of the covariance matrix ranged from 0.571 down to 0.133. The eigenvectors were used to calculate principal components. Thus 50 more or less correlated variables were transformed into 50 uncorrelated variables with the same total variance. The sequences were sorted according to the principal components to reveal which features were associated with the most variation amongst the sequences. When the covariances among the coded sequences were calculated many associations were found, for example, a purine at position 15 was associated with a purine at position 16, and a purine at position 19 with a G or C at position 20. Although these correlations individually were not especially strong, together they were a notable feature of the set of sequences. The consensus sequence was observed to be agggg ggggg ggc(g/c)c ggggg gcgcc. A principal components analysis enabled the promoters to be identified which differed most (in opposite directions) from the consensus sequence, taking account of the correlations. Nearly all the elements of the first eigenvector were of alternating sign; thus the first principal component separated promoters which were rich in G from those rich in T. Almost all elements of the second eigenvector were positive, so the second principal component distinguished promoters rich in A from those rich in C. There was a remarkable concentration of promoters from genes for interleukins or IL repressors with large values for the second principal component:- IL1A, IL2, IL4, IL6-2, IL2RA1, IL2RA2 and IL8RB were in positions 160, 43, 14, 158, 131, 101 and 158 (out of 1977) respectively. The variation in the sequence of promoters about their consensus sequence is seen not to be random but to display detectable patterns. Correlations were found to be frequent within the promoter sequences considered here; in the absence of correlations all the eigenvalues would have been equal. The major principal components separated promoters with markedly different sequences. It is to be expected that the other principal components would yield further separations.


2016 ◽  
Vol 60 (7) ◽  
pp. 4394-4397 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurent Poirel ◽  
Nicolas Kieffer ◽  
Adrian Brink ◽  
Jennifer Coetze ◽  
Aurélie Jayol ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTA series of colistin-resistantEscherichia coliclinical isolates was recovered from hospitalized and community patients in South Africa. Seven clonally unrelated isolates harbored themcr-1gene located on different plasmid backbones. Two distinct plasmids were fully sequenced, and identical 2,600-bp-long DNA sequences defining amcr-1cassette were identified. Promoter sequences responsible for the expression ofmcr-1, deduced from the precise identification of the +1 transcription start site formcr-1, were characterized.


1986 ◽  
Vol 6 (11) ◽  
pp. 4093-4098
Author(s):  
K Nishikura

By microinjecting a series of deletion mutant constructs into Xenopus laevis oocytes, transcriptional control regions, two promoters, of the human c-myc gene were defined. In the case of the first promoter, sequences between -60 and -37 relative to the transcription start site contained an element essential for promoter activity. In the case of the second promoter, sequences between -66 and -56 relative to the initiation site appeared to be involved in accurate and efficient transcription. In both cases, the region identified as the essential promoter element contained GGGCGG or GGCGGG,GC box-like sequences, suggesting that c-myc gene promoter activity may be controlled by transcription factor Sp1 binding in the microinjected oocytes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 124-134
Author(s):  
Mark Featherstone

Abstract In the first part of this article on Žižek's recent book Pandemic! I show how he develops a political theology of the spirit through a discussion of social distancing. In this argument Žižek connects the idea of physical distance to the biblical story of the resurrection, in which Jesus says to Mary Magdalene “noli me tangere” (“touch me not”), in order to imagine the emergence of a community of spirit from the social, political, and economic ruin caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Contrasting this community of spirit to the Chinese Communist Party's Foucauldian response to the outbreak of the virus, Žižek suggests a turn away from Prometheanism and the logic of domination toward a new posthuman humanitarianism based on a recognition of human weakness, vulnerability, and fragility. In Žižek's view, this turn toward a new form of humility would emerge from the final disenchantment of the spirit of capitalism and a recognition of the difference between human work, which contributes to a meaningful world, and bestial labor that dehumanizes and means nothing. Thus, the article shows how Žižek thinks about the pandemic in terms of a crisis of late capitalism and the possibility of a new spirit of communism. While the presexual nonlife of the virus is comparable to the drive of capitalism in respect of its unthinking will to replication and reproduction, Žižek founds the basis of humanity in our (human) mortality and being toward death that open out onto a new horizon of releasement (Gelassenheit) beyond biotechnoeconomic nihilism. The conclusion of the article, therefore, shows how Žižek imagines that the pandemic presents humanity with an existential choice about the way we organize social life. This choice is between the biopolitical domination of Chinese authoritarianism that seeks to control every aspect of life, American disaster capitalism that accepts the brutality of the state of nature, and finally Žižek's utopian spirit of communism based on a recognition of human and planetary finitude.


2017 ◽  
Vol 372 (1736) ◽  
pp. 20160458 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tyler V. Kent ◽  
Jasmina Uzunović ◽  
Stephen I. Wright

One of the most striking patterns of genome structure is the tight, typically negative, association between transposable elements (TEs) and meiotic recombination rates. While this is a highly recurring feature of eukaryotic genomes, the mechanisms driving correlations between TEs and recombination remain poorly understood, and distinguishing cause versus effect is challenging. Here, we review the evidence for a relation between TEs and recombination, and discuss the underlying evolutionary forces. Evidence to date suggests that overall TE densities correlate negatively with recombination, but the strength of this correlation varies across element types, and the pattern can be reversed. Results suggest that heterogeneity in the strength of selection against ectopic recombination and gene disruption can drive TE accumulation in regions of low recombination, but there is also strong evidence that the regulation of TEs can influence local recombination rates. We hypothesize that TE insertion polymorphism may be important in driving within-species variation in recombination rates in surrounding genomic regions. Furthermore, the interaction between TEs and recombination may create positive feedback, whereby TE accumulation in non-recombining regions contributes to the spread of recombination suppression. Further investigation of the coevolution between recombination and TEs has important implications for our understanding of the evolution of recombination rates and genome structure. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Evolutionary causes and consequences of recombination rate variation in sexual organisms’.


2001 ◽  
Vol 183 (3) ◽  
pp. 1096-1100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Norman G. Hommes ◽  
Luis A. Sayavedra-Soto ◽  
Daniel J. Arp

ABSTRACT The genes encoding ammonia monooxygenase (amoCAB), hydroxylamine oxidoreductase (hao), and thec-type cytochrome c-554 (hcy) are present in multiple copies in the genome of Nitrosomonas europaea. The upstream regions of the two copies ofamoC, the three copies of hao, and one copy ofhcy were cloned and sequenced. Primer extension reactions were done to identify transcription start sites for these genes, as well as for amoA. Putative ς70 promoter sequences were found associated with all but one of the mapped transcription start sites. Primer extensions were done withamoC primers using RNA harvested from cells incubated with and without ammonium. The experiments suggested that N. europaea cells may be able to use different promoters in the presence and absence of ammonium.


1971 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter S. Carlson

SUMMARYA study of the structural and functional organization of the rudimentary (r: 1–54·5) locus of Drosophila melanogaster has demonstrated that alleles of this gene reside in a number of recombinationally separable sites, and display a complex pattern of interallelic interaction. Data relating to interallelic interaction have been utilized to construct a linear complementation map consisting of 7 complementation units and 16 complementation groups. Comparison of the genetic fine structure map and the complementation map shows that the two maps are approximately co-linear. Totally non-complementing alleles reside at both ends of the fine structure map. The r locus is best interpreted by the model of a single cistron whose product affects several distinct developmental processes and whose alleles display a complex pattern of interallelic complementation. Intragenic recombination within the r locus is accompanied by the appearance of parental and recombinant flanking marker classes not expected on the basis of reciprocal recombination. Studies with half-tetrads demonstrate that intragenic recombination can occur either by gene conversion or by a reciprocal exchange mechanism. The pattern of organization seen at the r locus is similar to patterns of organization found in work with fungal genes.


2014 ◽  
Vol 934 ◽  
pp. 182-187
Author(s):  
Qiu Fu Shan ◽  
Ji Hua Feng ◽  
Ying Lu ◽  
Zen Hui Shan ◽  
Pan Feng Chen

Some significant differences about nucleosome positioning of different expression patterns gene have been found while researching the nucleosome positioning of Drosophila embryogenesis. The difference from the previous study was the restricted expression pattern gene incorporating H2A.Z into the-1 nucleosome in the upstream of Transcription Start Sites (TSS). Interestingly, compared with the nucleosome positioning of yeast genes, this nucleosome arrangement at gene of restricted expression pattern is similar with the characteristic found in yeast.


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