Conservation of Microstructure between a Sequenced Region of the Genome of Rice and Multiple Segments of the Genome of Arabidopsis thaliana

  1. Klaus Mayer1,
  2. George Murphy2,
  3. Renato Tarchini3,11,
  4. Rolf Wambutt4,
  5. Guido Volckaert5,
  6. Thomas Pohl6,
  7. Andreas Düsterhöft7,
  8. Willem Stiekema8,
  9. Karl-Dieter Entian9,
  10. Nancy Terryn10,
  11. Kai Lemcke1,
  12. Dirk Haase1,
  13. Caroline R. Hall2,
  14. Anne-Marie van Dodeweerd2,
  15. Scott V. Tingey3,
  16. Hans-Werner Mewes1,
  17. Michael W. Bevan2, and
  18. Ian Bancroft2,12
  1. 1National Research Center for Environment and Health, Institute for Bioinformatics, Munich Information Centre for Protein Sequences, 85764 Neuherberg, Germany; 2John Innes Centre, Colney, Norwich, NR7 4UH, United Kingdom; 3DuPont Agricultural Biotechnology, Newark, Delaware 19711, USA; 4AGOWA GmbH, D-12489 Berlin, Germany; 5Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Laboratory of Gene Technology, B-3001 Leuven, Belgium; 6GATC GmbH, D-78467 Konstanz, Germany; 7QIAGEN GmbH, Max-Volmer-Str.4, D-40724 Hilden, Germany; 8Plant Research International, NL 6708 PB, Wageningen, The Netherlands; 9Institut für Mikrobiologie, D-60439 Frankfurt/M., Germany; 10Department of Genetics, University of Ghent, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium

Abstract

The nucleotide sequence was determined for a 340-kb segment of rice chromosome 2, revealing 56 putative protein-coding genes. This represents a density of one gene per 6.1 kb, which is higher than was reported for a previously sequenced segment of the rice genome. Sixteen of the putative genes were supported by matches to ESTs. The predicted products of 29 of the putative genes showed similarity to known proteins, and a further 17 genes showed similarity only to predicted or hypothetical proteins identified in genome sequence data. The region contains a few transposable elements: one retrotransposon, and one transposon. The segment of the rice genome studied had previously been identified as representing a part of rice chromosome 2 that may be homologous to a segment of Arabidopsis chromosome 4. We confirmed the conservation of gene content and order between the two genome segments. In addition, we identified a further four segments of the Arabidopsis genome that contain conserved gene content and order. In total, 22 of the 56 genes identified in the rice genome segment were represented in this set of Arabidopsis genome segments, with at least five genes present, in conserved order, in each segment. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that theArabidopsis genome has undergone multiple duplication events. Our results demonstrate that conservation of the genome microstructure can be identified even between monocot and dicot species. However, the frequent occurrence of duplication, and subsequent microstructure divergence, within plant genomes may necessitate the integration of subsets of genes present in multiple redundant segments to deduce evolutionary relationships and identify orthologous genes.

Footnotes

  • 11 Present address: Plant Research International, Droevendaalsesleeg 1, 6708 PB, Wageningen, The Netherlands.

  • 12 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL ian.bancroft{at}bbsrc.ac.uk; FAX: 44 1603 259882.

  • Article published on-line before print: Genome Res., 10.1101/gr.161701.

  • Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.161701.

    • Received August 23, 2000.
    • Accepted April 3, 2001.
| Table of Contents

Preprint Server