Molecular cloning of a pea H1 histone cDNA
- PMID: 3109912
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1987.tb13490.x
Molecular cloning of a pea H1 histone cDNA
Abstract
A pea (Pisum sativum, var. Little Marvel) H1 histone cDNA has been isolated from a lambda gt11 expression vector library. This cDNA has been sequenced and shown to represent the entire protein-coding region of the mRNA. The deduced protein sequence is 265 amino acids long (28018 Da) and contains 70 lysines and 3 arginines. The structure of the encoded protein is comparable to animal lysine-rich histones. The central region, which has an amino acid composition similar to that found in the globular domains of animal lysine-rich histones, is flanked by an amino-terminal region rich in lysine, glutamic acid and proline and by a carboxyl-terminal region rich in lysine, alanine, valine and proline. Despite the structural similarities, the protein has little sequence homology with animal lysine-rich histones. This H1 protein is unusual because 12 of the first 40 amino acids are glutamic acid.
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