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Comparative Study
. 1985 Sep 5;185(1):1-19.
doi: 10.1016/0022-2836(85)90179-2.

Evolution and structure of the fibrinogen genes. Random insertion of introns or selective loss?

Comparative Study

Evolution and structure of the fibrinogen genes. Random insertion of introns or selective loss?

G R Crabtree et al. J Mol Biol. .

Abstract

Chromosomal linkage as well as sequence homologies provide unequivocal evidence that the genes for the alpha, beta and gamma chains of fibrinogen arose by successive duplication of a single ancestral gene. Yet, when the three fibrinogen chains are aligned by amino acid homology, the positions of intervening sequences coincide at only two positions for all three chains. While one additional intron occurs at a homologous site in the beta and gamma chains, none of the positions of the remaining 11 introns in the three genes is shared. This arrangement of introns in the three fibrinogen genes suggests that either introns were selectively lost, implying that there is essential information in the retained introns, or the common introns were present in the ancestral fibrinogen gene and introns have been randomly inserted since the triplication of the original gene. The more likely possibility of selective loss of introns implies that the ancestral gene, as it existed about one billion years ago, must have been composed of numerous small exons.

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