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  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-5028
    Keywords: nucleotide sequence ; repeated DNA sequence, rye ; (Secale cereale) ; transposon
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The rye-specific R173 family of repeated DNA sequences consists of ca. 15 000 individual copies per diploid rye (Secale cereale) genome and is distributed over all 7 rye chromosomes in a dispersed manner. Individual R173 elements vary in size between 3 and 6 kb, are generally not arranged as tandem repeats and are flanked by both multi-copy and single-copy sequences. DNA sequence analysis of three R173 elements (R173-1, R173-2 and R173-3) demonstrated a high degree of homology in conserved domains. The structure of R173-1 was quite different from the other two elements: long direct repeats, which represent a rye-specific repetitive sequence, were found at the ends and a 600 bp long domain was replaced by an unrelated sequence of approximately equal size. R173-2 and R173-3 were extremely similar to each other with the exception of a terminal truncation of R173-2. No open reading frames for proteins 〉20 kDa were present and a database search failed to detect significant homologies to published protein sequences. Despite the transposon like genomic organisation of the R173 family, individual elements lacked sequence features frequently associated with transposons and retrotransposons. In contrast, two of the regions flanking R173 elements showed strong DNA homologies to a 850 bp long region of a proposed wheat retrotransposon and to a 300 bp long region downstream of the wheatGlu-D1 gene.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Molecular genetics and genomics 246 (1995), S. 387-396 
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Xenopus ovary ; cDNA expression library Yeast transformation ; Weel kinase ; Cell cycle
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In fission yeast the Weel kinase and the functionally redundant Mikl kinase provide a regulatory mechanism to ensure that mitosis is initiated only after the completion of DNA synthesis. Yeast in which both Weel and Mik1 kinases are defective exhibit a mitotic catastrophe phenotype, presumably due to premature entry into mitosis. Because of the functional conservation of cell cycle control elements, the expression of a vertebrate weel or mikl homolog would be expected to rescue such lethal mutations in yeast. A Xenopus total ovary cDNA library was constructed in a fission yeast expression vector and used to transform a yeast temperature-dependent mitotic catastrophe mutant defective in both weel and mikl. Here we report the identification of a Xenopus cDNA clone that can rescue several different yeast mitotic catastrophe mutants defective in Weel kinase function. The expression of this clone in a weel/mikl-deficient mutant causes an elongated cell phenotype under non-permissive growth conditions. The 2.0 kb cDNA clone contains an open reading frame of 1263 nucleotides, encoding a predicted 47 kDa protein. Bacterially expressed recombinant protein was used to raise a polyclonal antibody, which specifically recognizes a 47 kDa protein from Xenopus oocyte nuclei, suggesting the gene encodes a nuclear protein in Xenopus. The ability of this cDNA to complement mitotic catastrophe mutations is independent of Weel kinase activity.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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