• Title of article

    Non-clonability correlates with genomic instability: a case study of a unique DNA region

  • Author/Authors

    Sergey V Razin، نويسنده , , Elena S Ioudinkova، نويسنده , , Edward N Trifonov، نويسنده , , Klaus Scherrer، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    481
  • To page
    486
  • Abstract
    Instability of eukaryotic DNA in constructs propagated in prokaryotic hosts is a frequently observed phenomenon. With the exception of a very high A+T-content and the presence of multiple repetitions, no general rule at the basis of this phenomenon is actually known. The intergenic spacer located between the π and αD chicken alpha-type globin genes is frequently deleted from recombinant phages and plasmids. Here we have cloned this DNA fragment using a specially designed bacterial strain (SURE competent cells, Stratogene). Comparative analysis of DNA of recombinant clones bearing deletions and clones containing the intact genomic DNA fragment has revealed two important DNA sequence motifs that contribute to the unclonability of eukaryotic DNA in prokaryotic cells. First, the similarity to bacterial transposons (i.e. the presence of repeats flanking a several kilobase DNA fragment) may cause the loss of the fragment during propagation of the recombinant DNA in E. coli. Second, a high content of rotationally correlated kinkable elements (TG∗CA steps) may result in non-clonability of the DNA sequence. Interestingly, the latter type of “unclonable” DNA sequence motifs identified in the globin gene domain is unstable (frequently rearranged) also in the eukaryotic chromosome resulting in a local polymorphism. In the chicken domain of alpha globin genes this unstable DNA sequence seems to be partially protected by interaction with nuclear matrix proteins.
  • Keywords
    “unclonable” DNA , kinkable dinucleotide steps , nuclear matrix , globin genes , Genomic instability
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Serial Year
    2001
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Record number

    1240631