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Reproductive barriers exist between the house mouse subspecies, Mus musculus musculus and M. m. domesticus, members of the Mus musculus species complex, primarily as a result of hybrid male infertility, and a hybrid zone exists where their ranges intersect in Europe. Using single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) diagnostic for the two taxa, the extent of introgression across the genome was previously...
Previous studies have indicated a paucity of SINEs within the genomes of the guinea pig and nutria, representatives of the Hystricognathi suborder of rodents. More recent work has shown that the guinea pig genome contains a large number of B1 elements, expanding to various levels among different rodents. In this work we utilized A–B PCR and screened GenBank with sequences from isolated clones to identify...
The mouse genome consists of five known families of SINEs: B1, B2, B4/RSINE, ID, and MIR. Using RT-PCR we identified a germ-line transcript that demonstrates 92.7% sequence identity to ID (excluding primer sequence), yet a BLAST search identified numerous matches of 100% sequence identity. We analyzed four of these elements for their presence in orthologous genes in strains and subspecies of Mus musculus...
Alu elements represent a family of short interspersed DNA elements (SINEs) found in primate genomes. These are members of a group of transposable elements that integrate into the genome by the process of retrotransposition. Recent integrations of Alu elements within the human genome have generated presence/absence variants useful as DNA markers in human population studies as well as in forensic and...
Alu repeats in primates have been shown to evolve at a neutral mutation rate, as anticipated for non-coding autosomal loci. However, we have identified Alu elements within the 3' untranslated region (UTR) of the low density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) gene that exhibited highly accelerated rates of evolution. In humans, a 100- and 25-fold increase in average divergence, for an upstream Alu (Alu U)...
Abstract. Short interspersed DNA elements (SINEs) amplify by retroposition either by (i) successive waves of amplification from one or a few evolving master genes or by (ii) the generation of new master genes that coexist with their progenitors. Individual, highly conserved, elements of the B1 SINE family were identified from the GenBank nucleotide database using various B1 subfamily consensus query...
Alu elements undergo amplification through retroposition and integration into new locations throughout primate genomes. Over 500,000 Alu elements reside in the human genome, making the identification of newly inserted Alu repeats the genomic equivalent of finding needles in the haystack. Here, we present two complementary methods for rapid detection of newly integrated Alu elements. In the first approach...
B2 repeats are a group of short interspersed elements (SINEs) specific for rodent genomes. Copy numbers were determined for different rodent genera. All the Muroid (rat, mouse, deer mouse, hamster, gerbil) rodent genomes analyzed exhibited 80,000–100,000 copies per haploid genome, whereas the squirrel genome contains only 2,500 copies, and fewer than 100 (if any) copies were observed for the Hystricognath...
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