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2 result(s) for "GENBANK/AF039631"
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The root knot nematode resistance gene Mi from tomato is a member of the leucine zipper, nucleotide binding, leucine-rich repeat family of plant genes
The Mi locus of tomato confers resistance to root knot nematodes. Tomato DNA spanning the locus was isolated as bacterial artificial chromosome clones, and 52 kb of contiguous DNA was sequenced. Three open reading frames were identified with similarity to cloned plant disease resistance genes. Two of them, Mi-1.1 and Mi-1.2, appear to be intact genes; the third is a pseudogene. A 4-kb mRNA hybridizing with these genes is present in tomato roots. Complementation studies using cloned copies of Mi-1.1 and Mi-1.2 indicated that Mi-1.2, but not Mi-1.1, is sufficient to confer resistance to a susceptible tomato line with the progeny of transformants segregating for resistance. The cloned gene most similar to Mi-1.2 is Prf, a tomato gene required for resistance to Pseudomonas syringae. Prf and Mi-1.2 share several structural motifs, including a nucleotide binding site and a leucine-rich repeat region, that are characteristic of a family of plant proteins, including several that are required for resistance against viruses, bacteria, fungi, and now, nematodes
New Drosophila introns originate by duplication
We have analyzed the phylogenetic distribution of introns in the gene coding for xanthine dehydrogenase in 37 species, including 31 dipterans sequenced by us. We have discovered three narrowly distributed novel introns, one in the medfly Ceratitis capitata, the second in the willistoni and saltans groups of Drosophila, and the third in two sibling species of the willistoni group. The phylogenetic distribution of these introns favors the \"introns-late\" theory of the origin of genes. Analysis of the nucleotide sequences indicates that all three introns have arisen by duplication of a preexisting intron, which is pervasive in Drosophila and other dipterans (and has a homologous position as an intron found in humans and other diverse organisms).