A ubiquitous family of repeated DNA sequences in the human genome
摘要:
Renatured DNA from human and many other eukaryotes is known to contain 300-nucleotide duplex regions formed from renatured repeated sequences. These short repeated DNA sequences are widely believed to be interspersed with single copy DNA sequences. In this work we show that at least half of these 300-nucleotide duplexes share a cleavage site for the restriction enzyme AluI. This site is located 170 nucleotides from one end. This Alu family of repeated sequences makes up at least 3% of the genome and is present in several hundred thousand copies. Inverted repeated sequences are also known to contain a short 300-nucleotide duplex region. We find that at least half of the 300-nucleotide duplex regions in inverted repeated sequences also have an AluI restriction site located 170 nucleotides from one end. By driven renaturation techniques, the Alu family is shown to be distributed over a minimum range of 30% to 60% of the genome. (The breadth of this range reflects the presence of inverted repeated sequences which, in part, include the Alu family.) These findings imply that the interspersion pattern of repeated and single copy sequences in human DNA is largely dominated by one family of repeated sequences.
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DOI:
10.1016/0022-2836(79)90261-4
被引量:
年份:
1979
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