Abstract
We have previously found that a short interspersed element (SINE), named p-SINE1, is present in the Waxy gene of Oryza sativa in two copies. Here, we cloned five members of p-SINE1 located at other loci in O. sativa and determined their nucleotide sequences. These sequences had a T-rich pyrimidine tract at their defined 3' end and were flanked by direct repeats of a sequence of mostly 14-15 bp long like p-SINE1s in the Waxy gene. The consensus sequence derived from total seven members of p-SINE1 was 123 bp in length and had an internal promoter region for RNA polymerase III. The 5'-half region of the sequence was partially homologous to the tRNA-related block of rabbit C family, one of SINEs in the animal system. Two of the seven p-SINE1 members were not present in the corresponding loci in African rice, Oryza glaberrima, and may thus be available for classification of some rice strains. Comparison of the nucleotide sequences of the Waxy gene between O. sativa and O. glaberrima showed that base substitutions have frequently occurred in a p-SINE1 member (p-SINE1-r1) and a transposable element Tnr1 also present in the Waxy gene, suggesting that these elements, which appear as repetitive sequences in the rice chromosome, tend to acquire base substitutions at a higher frequency than do unique sequences.
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