Abstract
TheArtemia hemoglobin contains two sub-units that are similar or different chains of nine globin domains. The domains are ancestrally related and are presumed to be derived from copies of an original single-domain parent gene. Since the gene copies have remained in the same environment for several hundred million years they provide an excellent model for the investigation of intron stability.
The cDNA for one of the two types of nine-domain subunit (domains T1–T9) has been sequenced. Comparison with the corresponding genomic DNA reveals a total of 17 intradomain introns. Fourteen of the introns are in locations on the protein that are conventional in globins of other species. In eight of the nine domains an intron corresponds to the B helix, amino acid B12, following the second nucleotide (phase 2), and in six domains a G-helix intron is located between G6 and G7 (phase 0). The consistency of this pattern is supportive of the introns having been inherited from a single-domain parent gene. The remaining three introns are in unconventional locations. Two occur in the F helix, either in amino acid F3 (phase 1) in domain T3, or between F2 and F3 (phase 0) in domain T6. The two F introns strengthen an interpretation of intron inheritance since globin F introns are rare, and in domains T3 and T6 they replace rather than supplement the conventional G introns, as though displacement from G to F occurred before that part of the gene became duplicated. It is inferred that one of the F introns subsequently moved by one nucleotide. Similarly, the third unconventional intron location is the G intron in domain T4 which is in G6, phase 2, one nucleotide earlier than the other G introns. Domain T4 is also unusual in lacking a B intron. The pattern of introns in theArtemia globin gene supports a concept of general positional stability but the exceptions, where introns have moved out of reading frame, or have moved by several codons, or have been deleted, suggest that intron displacements can occur after inheritance from an ancient source.
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Correspondence to: C.N.A. Trotman
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Jellie, A.M., Tate, W.P. & Trotman, C.N.A. Evolutionary history of introns in a multidomain globin gene. J Mol Evol 42, 641–647 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02338797
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02338797