
doi: 10.1007/bf00160212
pmid: 1474605
Computer-based structural analysis of the ribosomal DNA intergenic spacer (IGS) from the mosquito Aedes albopictus revealed a potential to form strong and extensive secondary structures throughout a 4.7-kilobase (kb) region. The predicted stability of secondary structures was particularly high within a 3.15-kb region containing 17 tandem 201 base-pair subrepeats. Similarly strong secondary structure potential was also found when IGS subrepeats were analyzed from 17 phylogenetically diverse eukaryotes, including vertebrates, invertebrates, and plants. Conservation of higher-order structure potential in the IGS region of ribosomal DNA may reflect evolutionary and functional constraints on chromatin organization, transcriptional regulation of the ribosomal RNA genes, and/or transcript processing and stability.
Base Sequence, Species Specificity, Aedes, RNA, Ribosomal, Molecular Sequence Data, Animals, Nucleic Acid Conformation, DNA, Ribosomal, Phylogeny
Base Sequence, Species Specificity, Aedes, RNA, Ribosomal, Molecular Sequence Data, Animals, Nucleic Acid Conformation, DNA, Ribosomal, Phylogeny
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