Genomic Organization and Deduced Amino Acid Sequence of a Putative Sodium Channel Gene in Drosophila
- 14 August 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 237 (4816) , 744-749
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.2441469
Abstract
The deduced amino acid sequence of a Drosophila gene isolated with a vertebrate sodium channel complementary DNA probe revealed an organization virtually identical to the vertebrate sodium channel protein; four homologous domains containing all putative membrane-spanning regions are repeated in tandem with connecting linkers of various sizes. All areas of the protein presumed to be critical for channel function show high evolutionary conservation. These include those proposed to function in voltage-sensitive gating, inactivation, and ion selectivity. All 24 putative gating charges of the vertebrate protein are in identical positions in the Drosophila gene. Ten introns interrupt the coding regions of the four homology units; introns with positions conserved among homology units bracket a region hypothesized to be the selectivity filter for the channel. The Drosophila gene maps to the right arm of the second chromosome in region 60D-E. This position does not coincide with any known mutations that confer behavioral phenotypes, but is close to the seizure locus (60A-B), which has been hypothesized to code for a voltage-sensitive sodium channel.This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sevenless , a Cell-Specific Homeotic Gene of Drosophila , Encodes a Putative Transmembrane Receptor with a Tyrosine Kinase DomainScience, 1987
- Expression of functional sodium channels from cloned cDNANature, 1986
- Existence of distinct sodium channel messenger RNAs in rat brainNature, 1986
- Isolation and structure of a rhodopsin gene from D. melanogasterCell, 1985
- Location of functional regions of acetylcholine receptor α-subunit by site-directed mutagenesisNature, 1985
- Primary structure of Electrophorus electricus sodium channel deduced from cDNA sequenceNature, 1984
- Splice Junctions: Association with Variation in Protein StructureScience, 1983
- Intron–exon splice junctions map at protein surfacesNature, 1982
- Inactivation of the sodium channel. II. Gating current experiments.The Journal of general physiology, 1977
- Destruction of Sodium Conductance Inactivation in Squid Axons Perfused with PronaseThe Journal of general physiology, 1973