| Literature DB >> 17141428 |
C Daniel Eller1, Moira Regelson, Barry Merriman, Stan Nelson, Steve Horvath, York Marahrens.
Abstract
Housekeeping genes are expressed across a wide variety of tissues. Since repetitive sequences have been reported to influence the expression of individual genes, we employed a novel approach to determine whether housekeeping genes can be distinguished from tissue-specific genes by their repetitive sequence context. We show that Alu elements are more highly concentrated around housekeeping genes while various longer (>400-bp) repetitive sequences ("repeats"), including Long Interspersed Nuclear Element-1 (LINE-1) elements, are excluded from these regions. We further show that isochore membership does not distinguish housekeeping genes from tissue-specific genes and that repetitive sequence environment distinguishes housekeeping genes from tissue-specific genes in every isochore. The distinct repetitive sequence environment, in combination with other previously published sequence properties of housekeeping genes, was used to develop a method of predicting housekeeping genes on the basis of DNA sequence alone. Using expression across tissue types as a measure of success, we demonstrate that repetitive sequence environment is by far the most important sequence feature identified to date for distinguishing housekeeping genes.Mesh:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 17141428 PMCID: PMC1857324 DOI: 10.1016/j.gene.2006.09.018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gene ISSN: 0378-1119 Impact factor: 3.688