Numbers of 5S and tRNA genes in macro- and micronuclei of Tetrahymena pyriformis
- PMID: 815076
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00292813
Numbers of 5S and tRNA genes in macro- and micronuclei of Tetrahymena pyriformis
Abstract
Macronuclei of Tetrahymena pyriformis contain approximately 200 copies of the genes for 25S and 17S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) per haploid genome. Micronuclei, however, contain only a few copies of the rRNA genes per haploid complement. Since macronuclei develop from products of meiosis, fertilization and division of micronuclei, we suggested that the multiple copies of the rRNA genes in macronuclei are generated by amplification of the small number of genes in micronuclei (Yao et al., 1974). This process provides a simple mechanism for maintaining the homogeneity of the repeated rRNA gnes. To test if amplification is a general mechanism operating on all repeated genes in Tetrahymena, we have examined the numbers of 5S RNA and tRNA genes in macro- and micronuclei. 5S RNA was purified by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and hybridized to saturation against macro- and micronuclear DNA. Approximately 0.013-0.014% of macronuclear DNA and about 0.009% of micronuclear DNA is complementary to 5S RNA. After correcting for the differences in the DNA sequence complexities between the two nuclei, we calculate that there are 300-350 5S genes per haploid macro- or micronuclear genome. From these data we conclude that there is little or no detectable amplification of the 5S genes in macronuclei relative to micronuclei. Similar studies using tRNA indicate that these genes are also highly repeated in both nuclei; about 800 genes are present per haploid genome. Thus, amplification from a small number of genes can be excluded as the mechanism for generating the repeated copies of the 5S and tRNA genes in Tetrahymena and it is likely that another, as yet unidentified, mechanism operates to maintain the homogeneity of these genes.
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