Nucleotide sequence and expression of rabbit globin genes zeta 1, zeta 2, and zeta 3. Pseudogenes generated by block duplications are transcriptionally competent
- PMID: 2838486
Nucleotide sequence and expression of rabbit globin genes zeta 1, zeta 2, and zeta 3. Pseudogenes generated by block duplications are transcriptionally competent
Abstract
The addition of two embryonic globin genes, zeta 0 and zeta 4, to the rabbit alpha-like globin gene cluster expands it to include eight genes arranged 5'-zeta 0-zeta 1-alpha 1-theta 1-zeta 2-zeta 3-theta 2-zeta 4-3'. The identification of these new genes supports the model that this gene cluster evolved by a series of block duplications of gene sets. The nucleotide sequence of three embryonic zeta-globin genes, zeta 1, zeta 2, and zeta 3, shows that all three are pseudogenes. Gene zeta 1 contains two frame-shift deletions, gene zeta 2 has lost exon 1 as well as the 5' promoter sequences, and gene zeta 3 has lost and replaced codons for amino acids that are critical for the function of alpha- and zeta-globin polypeptides. However, genes zeta 1 and zeta 3 are still transcriptionally competent, as shown by the accurate initiation and processing of transcripts from cloned genes introduced into HeLa cells. A quantitative comparison of the zeta-globin gene sequences indicates that the ancestor to the rabbit zeta 1 and zeta 3 genes was inactivated about 44 million years ago, and the block duplication that formed the two genes occurred about 28 million years ago. About 600 base pairs of the 5'-flanking sequence of the rabbit zeta 3-globin gene is very similar to the 5' flanks of three other mammalian zeta-globin genes.
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