Literature DB >> 12832634

Remarkable sequence conservation of the last intron in the PKD1 gene.

Marianna Rodova1, M Rafiq Islam, Kenneth R Peterson, James P Calvet.   

Abstract

The last intron of the PKD1 gene (intron 45) was found to have exceptionally high sequence conservation across four mammalian species: human, mouse, rat, and dog. This conservation did not extend to the comparable intron in pufferfish. Pairwise comparisons for intron 45 showed 91% identity (human vs. dog) to 100% identity (mouse vs. rat) for an average for all four species of 94% identity. In contrast, introns 43 and 44 of the PKD1 gene had average pairwise identities of 57% and 54%, and exons 43, 44, and 45 and the coding region of exon 46 had average pairwise identities of 80%, 84%, 82%, and 80%. Intron 45 is 90 to 95 bp in length, with the major region of sequence divergence being in a central 4-bp to 9-bp variable region. RNA secondary structure analysis of intron 45 predicts a branching stem-loop structure in which the central variable region lies in one loop and the putative branch point sequence lies in another loop, suggesting that the intron adopts a specific stem-loop structure that may be important for its removal. Although intron 45 appears to conform to the class of small, G-triplet-containing introns that are spliced by a mechanism utilizing intron definition, its high sequence conservation may be a reflection of constraints imposed by a unique mechanism that coordinates splicing of this last PKD1 intron with polyadenylation.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12832634     DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msg191

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Evol        ISSN: 0737-4038            Impact factor:   16.240


  6 in total

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Authors:  Stephen C Parnell; Brenda S Magenheimer; Robin L Maser; Tengis S Pavlov; Mallory A Havens; Michelle L Hastings; Stephen F Jackson; Christopher J Ward; Kenneth R Peterson; Alexander Staruschenko; James P Calvet
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  6 in total

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