Abstract

The restriction endonucleases SalGI and PstI have been used to construct a physical map of wheat ctDNA. The molecule was found to contain approximately 135 kbq, and in common with many other higher plant ctDNAs about 15% of the sequences are repeated in an inverted orientation. It was established by electron microscopy that, in wheat, each segment of the inverted repeat contains 21.0 kbp, and that the single copy regions separating the two repeated segments contain 12.8 kbp and 80.2 kbp. Blot hybridisation showed that one set of ribosomal genes is located in each segment of the inverted repeat region and the sizes of these genes were accurately determined by measuring the dimensions of hybrids between the chloroplast rRNAs and the identified Sal and Eco fragments on electron micrographs: the genes for the 16S and 23S rRNAs contain 1530 bp and 2850 bp respectively and are separated by a spacer region of 2350 bp. The Bgl fragment of maize ctDNA known to contain the structural gene for the large-subunit (LS) of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase was used as a probe to locate the LS gene in wheat ctDNA. A small (2.8 kbp) Eco fragment was found to contain most of the wheat LS gene and is derived from the larger single-copy region, 23.5 kbp away from one segment of the inverted repeat and 54.8 kbp from the other.

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