Organization and chromosomal location of repetitive DNA sequences in three species of squamate reptiles |
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Authors: | Porter Calvin Anthon |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biological Sciences, Texas Tech University, 79409 Lubbock, TX, USA;(2) Present address: Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, MRB-422, 550 East Canfield Avenue, 48201 Detroit, MI, USA |
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Abstract: | Repetitive DNA sequences were isolated from the genomes of species representing three major clades of squamate reptiles. A repetitive sequence (Cn4C7) was isolated from the New Mexican whiptail lizard,Cnemidophorus neomexicanus. This sequence is distributed throughout the chromosomes, but is more concentrated in the telomeric region. Cn4C7 also hybridizes to the chromosomes of otherCnemidophorus. Some evidence was found for concerted evolution of this repeat in hybrid unisexual lineages. In the lesser earless lizard,Holbrookia maculata, the predominant repeat in the genome is represented by a sequence (Hm1E11) which is restricted to the area flanking the centromere in all species ofHolbrookia. Two families of repetitive sequences (one dispersed, and the other telomeric) were isolated from the western diamondback rattlesnake,Crotalus atrox. The type and distribution of repetitive sequences in squamates is often taxon-specific, and may be useful as characters for elucidating taxonomic relationships. |
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Keywords: | chromosomes genome organization in situ hybridization repetitive DNA reptiles |
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