Interspecific ?common? repetitive DNA sequences in salamanders of the genus Plethodon
- 1 January 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Chromosoma
- Vol. 58 (1), 1-31
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00293437
Abstract
Intermediate repetitive sequences of Plethodon cinereus which comprised about 30% of the genomic DNA were isolated and iodinated with 125I. About 5% of the 125I-repetitive fraction hybridized with a large excess of DNA from P. dunni at Cot 20. About half of the 125I-DNA in the hybrids was resistant to extensive digestion with S-1 nuclease. The average molecular size of the S-1 nuclease-resistant fraction was about 100 nucleotide pairs. The melting temperature of the S-1 nuclease-resistant fraction was about 2° lower than that of the corresponding fraction made with P. cinereus DNA. These results are taken to indicate the presence in the genomes of P. cinereus and P. dunni of evolutionarily stable “common” repetitive sequences. The average frequency of repetition of the common repetitive sequences is about 6,000 × in both species. The common repetitive fraction is also present in the genomes of other species of Plethodon, although the general populations of intermediate repetitive sequences are markedly different from one species to another. The cinereus-dunni common repetitive sequences could not be detected in plethodontids belonging to different tribes, nor in more distantly related amphibians. The profiles of binding of the common repetitive sequences to CsCl or Cs2SO4-Ag+ density gradient fractions of P. dunni DNA suggested that these sequences consisted of heterogeneous components with respect to base compositions, and that they did not include large amounts of the genes for ribosomal RNA, 5S RNA, 4S RNA, or histone messenger RNA. — In situ hybridization of the 3H-labelled intermediate repetitive sequences of P. cinereus to male meiotic chromosomes of the same species gave autoradiographs after an exposure of seven days showing all 14 chromosomes labelled. The pattern of labelling appeared not to be random, but was impossible to analyse on account of the irregular shapes and different degrees of stretching of diplotene and prometaphase chromosomes. In situ hybridization of the same sequences to meiotic chromosomes from P. dunni gave autoradiographs after 60 d exposure in which all chromosomes were labelled. These heterologous in situ hybrids can only have involved the “common” repetitive sequences.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Transcripts of Reiterated DNA Sequences in the Determination of Blastomeres and Early Differentiation in Echinoid LarvaeAmerican Zoologist, 1975
- Structural genes adjacent to interspersed repetitive DNA sequencesCell, 1975
- A system for mapping DNA sequences in the chromosomes of Drosophila melanogasterCell, 1974
- Repetitive and non-repetitive sequence in sea urchin heterogeneous nuclear RNAJournal of Molecular Biology, 1974
- Interspersion of repetitive and non-repetitive DNA sequences in the sea urchin genomeCell, 1974
- Evolutionary stability of the histone genes of sea urchinsBiochemistry, 1973
- Conservatism of base sequences in RNA for early development of echinodermsDevelopmental Biology, 1970
- Gene linkage by RNA-DNA hybridizationJournal of Molecular Biology, 1968
- A membrane-filter technique for the detection of complementary DNABiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1966
- Sedimentation studies of the size and shape of DNAJournal of Molecular Biology, 1965