The Distribution and Spreading of Rare Variants in the Histone Multigene Family of Drosophila Melanogaster

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RESUMO

We surveyed the distribution of rare variant restriction sites within and among histone gene arrays of Drosophila melanogaster using restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis. Seventy-three naturally occurring arrays were digested with restriction enzymes that had no recognition sites in the published histone sequence. Of the arrays surveyed, 68.5% had at least two nonconsensus restriction sites present as indicated by the presence of a small band or bands on the autoradiographs. These bands were almost always the length of a single repeat in the histone multigene family or a multiple of this length. In arrays with more than one band, intensity of the bands almost always decreased with increasing size. This shows that within these arrays variant restriction sites were predominantly located on adjacent repeats. If these bands are caused by spreading of variant sites, as is most likely, then variants spread along the array as an inverse function of distance. Overall, if a sequence spread it had a 92% probability of ending up in its nearest neighbor. This pattern may result from the noncontiguous nature of the histone family.

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