ISSN:
1432-1432
Keywords:
Human
;
Chimpanzee
;
Glycophorins
;
MNSs blood-group system
;
Exon activation-inactivation
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Biology
Notes:
Abstract In humans, the allelic diversity of MNSs glycophorins (GP) occurs mainly through the recombinational modulation of silent exons (pseudoexons) in duplicated genes. To address the origin of such a mechanism, structures of GPA, GPB, and GPE were determined in chimpanzee, the only higher primate known to have achieved a three-gene framework as in humans. Pairwise comparison of the chimpanzee and human genes revealed a high degree of sequence identity and similar exon-intron organization. However, the chimpanzee GPA gene lacks a completely formed M- or N-defining sequence as well as a consensus sequence for the Asn-linked glycosylation. In the case of the GPB gene, exon III is expressed in the chimpanzee but silenced, as a pseudoexon, in the human. Therefore, the protein product in the chimpanzee bears a larger extracellular domain than in the human. For the GPE genes, exon III and exon IV have been inactivated by identical donor splice-site mutations in the two species. Nevertheless, the chimpanzee GPE-like mRNA appeared to be transcribed from a GPB/E composite gene containing no 24-bp insertion sequence in exon V for the transmembrane domain. These results suggest a divergent processing of exonic units from chimpanzee to human in which the inactivation of GPB exon III preserved a limited sequence repertoire for diversification of human glycophorins.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00160319
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