Published in: Chromosoma, Volume 108 Issue
6 (1999) pp 356-366:
J. Locke, L. T. Howard, N. Aippersbach, L. Podemski, and R. B. Hodgetts.
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta
T6G 2E9, Canada.
Abstract:
The banded portion of chromosome 4 (the "dot" chromosome) in
Drosophila melanogaster displays some properties of <beta>-heterochromatin,
which is normally found within the centric domain of the chromosomes. The
nature and distribution of repetitive elements on chromosome 4 could play
a role in the establishment of this unusual chromatin configuration. We
describe here one such element: a short, interspersed repetitive sequence
named DINE-1. Determination of a consensus sequence for the element reveals
that there are two conserved regions (A and B) separated by a highly variable
spacer. The conserved sequences are \sim400 bp long but degenerate at both
ends, opening the possibility that a yet-to-be-discovered mother element
may be present in the genome. DINE-1 bears few of the properties of the
mammalian short interspersed elements (SINEs) to which it bears a superficial
resemblance in size. It does not appear to be the product of reverse transcription
and lacks any polymerase III promoter consensus. The elements are not flanked
by target site duplications and their termini lack direct or inverted repeats,
suggesting that they themselves are not transposable. Our analysis of cosmid
clones from chromosome 4, and elsewhere in the genome, revealed that the
euchromatic locations of DINE-1 are almost exclusively confined to chromosome
4. In situ hybridization of a DINE-1 probe to polytene chromosomes confirmed
the preferential distribution along 4, in addition to its presence in the
centric heterochromatin. This unusual genomic distribution of bias toward
chromosome 4 is also seen in the sibling species, D. simulans, whose dot
chromosomes exhibit poorly resolved polytene bands and lack crossing over
during meiosis like those of D. melanogaster. However, the dot chromosome
of D. virilis, which exhibits a well-defined banded structure on polytene
chromosomes and can cross over, has only a single, discrete site of DINE-1
element hybridization. The presence of DINE-1 within these regions suggests
a role in the heterochromatic nature of chromosome 4 in D. melanogaster
and supports the contention that repeats accumulate in regions of diminished
crossing over.
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euchromatin: "the most active portion of the genome within the
cell nucleus".