期刊
MOLECULAR AND GENERAL GENETICS
卷 263, 期 5, 页码 828-837出版社
SPRINGER VERLAG
DOI: 10.1007/s004380000247
关键词
salmonidae; vitellogenin; tandem arrays; gene amplification; retrotransposon
Vitellogenins (Vtg) are the major yolk proteins in most oviparous organisms. They are encoded by a small number of genes - between one and four depending on the species. Characterization of the Vtg region in the genome of the rainbow trout reveals unusual features, however, in that this locus contains twenty complete genes and ten pseudogenes per haploid genome. The Vtg genes differ from each other by insertion, deletion and rearrangement events, although, at the sequence level, they show a high degree of similarity. Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH), pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and Southern analysis indicate that all gene copies are contained in a. single 1500-kb region, and that most of the genes form tandem arrays separated by a conserved 4.5-kb intergenic region. The presence of large reiterated fragments indicates that this region has been subjected to several amplification events. The presence of a retroposon element (called I9) in Vtg intron 9 appears to be responsible for the silencing of at least nine of the ten pseudogenes. Two other incomplete retrotransposons (one LTR- and one LINE-type) and sequences derived from a HIV-like retrovirus are inserted into the conserved intergenic region, very close to the transcription start site. Their presence in all Vtg 5'-flanking regions suggests a possible role in gene amplification at this locus.
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