Publication | Open Access
Preservation of a complex satellite DNA in two species of Echinoderms
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Citations
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References
1990
Year
Monomeric SequenceComparative GenomicsGeneticsDna AnalysisH. PoliiMolecular GeneticsGenomicsMonomeric Repeat UnitPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyMolecular EvidenceMorphological EvidenceDna ReplicationGenetic VariationPhylogenomicsPopulation GeneticsBiologyComplex Satellite DnaNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyGenome SequencingReference GenomeMedicineSequence Assembly
The cloning and sequencing of a tandemly arrayed repetitive DNA sequence from the sea cucumber Holothuria tubulosa has been recently described (Sainz, J., Azorín, F. and Cornudella, L. 1989. Gene 80, 57-64). We have now searched the genomes of several echinoderm species for the presence of homologous repetitive elements. A close but not identical repeated sequence has been identified in a related holothuroid, H. polii. The monomeric repeat unit is 391 bp long and has a base composition of 66.8% A and T residues, lined up in tracts of 4 nt or larger. The monomeric sequence lacks any internal subrepeat organization although it displays a substantial degree of internal redundancy in the form of inverted and direct repeats. The repeated element accounts for 0.34% of the genome which corresponds to a repetition frequency of about 0.5 x 10(5) copies per haploid complement. The intra- and interspecific homologies among monomers of the satellite DNA as derived from sequence analyses are very high, averaging 97%. The results suggest that the homogeneity of the highly reiterated DNA sequence may be attributed to evolutionary conservative trends.
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