Publication | Open Access
Molecular cloning of human gastrin cDNA: evidence for evolution of gastrin by gene duplication.
206
Citations
30
References
1983
Year
GeneticsMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsGenomicsGene DuplicationPhylogenetic AnalysisNucleic Acid ChemistryGastrin GeneGene StructureHuman Gastrin PrecursorBiochemistryOligonucleotideMolecular CloningGene EvolutionGene ExpressionFunctional GenomicsGastrin SequencesHuman Gastrin CdnaNatural SciencesMedicine
An oligo(dT)-primed cDNA copy of the mRNA coding for the human gastrin precursor was constructed from poly(A)-containing RNA from a human pancreatic, gastrin-producing tumor (a gastrinoma). The cDNA was inserted into the Pst I endonuclease site of plasmid pBR322 by the use of the poly(dC) and poly(dG) tailing procedure. Clones containing gastrin sequences were selected by hybridization to a purified single-stranded 32P-labeled gastrin cDNA probe. This probe was constructed with gastrinoma mRNA as template. As primer for the cDNA synthesis, we used a synthetic oligonucleotide mixture, d(AG-A-A-AG-T-C-C-A-T-C-C-A), corresponding to the gastrin-specific amino acid sequence Trp-Met-Asp-Phe. In this way we determined the nucleotide sequence of the entire coding region (303 nucleotides), the entire 3' untranslated region (102 nucleotides), and 8 nucleotides of the 5' untranslated region. A striking homology between parts of the coding region suggests that evolution of the gastrin gene has involved a gene duplication.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1