Literature DB >> 16290010

Complete, precise, and innocuous loss of multiple introns in the currently intronless, active cathepsin L-like genes, and inference from this event.

Ke-Jin Hu1, Pak-Chow Leung.   

Abstract

Retrotransposition typically generates pseudogenes. Here we demonstrate a different fate of the retro-processed genes through a novel mechanism in which the retro-processed genes still maintain their sequence intactness and the original functions. We show that the shrimp cathepsin L (CatL) gene MeCatL has lost all of its five introns. Also, ProEPB, the ancestor of the CatL-like barley EPBs and rice REP1, has lost all of its three introns. The multiple introns in a gene might have been eliminated simultaneously and precisely at the original locus for the CatL-like genes of shrimp, barley, rice, Drosophila, and Theileria. We reason that retrotransposition is not responsible for the generation of a processed active intronless (PAI) gene when the gene product retains its sequence intactness and its original function. We propose that double-strand-break repair (DSBR) machinery might play a role in cDNA-mediated homologous recombination (cDMHR) that causes the loss of introns. The cDMHR/DSBR pathway is probably a fundamental mechanism for intron loss in PAI genes and in some asymmetric-intron genes.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16290010     DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2005.09.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Phylogenet Evol        ISSN: 1055-7903            Impact factor:   4.286


  3 in total

1.  DNA double-strand break repair and the evolution of intron density.

Authors:  Ashley Farlow; Eshwar Meduri; Christian Schlötterer
Journal:  Trends Genet       Date:  2010-11-22       Impact factor: 11.639

2.  Insight into durum wheat Lpx-B1: a small gene family coding for the lipoxygenase responsible for carotenoid bleaching in mature grains.

Authors:  Angelo Verlotta; Vanessa De Simone; Anna M Mastrangelo; Luigi Cattivelli; Roberto Papa; Daniela Trono
Journal:  BMC Plant Biol       Date:  2010-11-26       Impact factor: 4.215

3.  Expansion and diversification of BTL ring-H2 ubiquitin ligases in angiosperms: putative Rabring7/BCA2 orthologs.

Authors:  Victor Aguilar-Hernández; Juliana Medina; Laura Aguilar-Henonin; Plinio Guzmán
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-08-08       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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