Centromere Satellites From Arabidopsis Populations: Maintenance of Conserved and Variable Domains
Open Access
- 14 January 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Genome Research
- Vol. 13 (2) , 195-205
- https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.593403
Abstract
The rapid evolution of centromere sequences between species has led to a debate over whether centromere activity is sequence-dependent. TheArabidopsis thaliana centromere regions contain ∼20,000 copies of a 178-bp satellite repeat. Here, we analyzed satellites from 41 Arabidopsis ecotypes, providing the first broad population survey of satellite variation within a species. We found highly conserved segments and consistent sequence lengths in theArabidopsis satellites and in the published collection of human α-satellites, supporting models for a functional role. Despite this conservation, polymorphisms are significantly enriched at some sites, yielding variation that could restrict binding proteins to a subset of repeat monomers. Some satellite regions vary considerably; at certain bases, consensus sequences derived from each ecotype diverge significantly from the Arabidopsis consensus, indicating substitutions sweep through a genome in less than 5 million years. Such rapid changes generate more variation within the set ofArabidopsis satellites than in genes from the chromosome arms or from the recombinationally suppressed centromere regions. These studies highlight a balance between the mechanisms that maintain particular satellite domains and the forces that disperse sequence changes throughout the satellite repeats in the genome.[Supplemental material is available online atwww.genome.org.]Keywords
This publication has 63 references indexed in Scilit:
- α-Satellite DNA and Vector Composition Influence Rates of Human Artificial Chromosome FormationMolecular Therapy, 2002
- Molecular characterization and distribution of a 145-bp tandem repeat family in the genus PopulusGenome, 1999
- Isolation and characterization of a satellite DNA family in the Saccharum complexGenome, 1998
- Human artificial chromosomes coming into focusNature Biotechnology, 1998
- The evolutionary dynamics of repetitive DNA in eukaryotesNature, 1994
- Distribution of CENP-B boxes reflected in CREST centromere antigenic sites on long-range α-satellite DNA arrays of human chromosome 21Human Molecular Genetics, 1994
- Concerted evolution of primate alpha satellite DNAJournal of Molecular Biology, 1990
- Genomic analysis of sequence variation in tandemly repeated DNAJournal of Molecular Biology, 1990
- Recombination and the evolution of satellite DNAGenetics Research, 1986
- Molecular drive: a cohesive mode of species evolutionNature, 1982