Abstract
Variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) genes of African trypanosomes are expressed when they are inserted into one of several telomere-linked expression sites. We cloned and characterized an 11-kilobase (kb) DNA fragment located upstream of an expressed VSG gene. A DNA sequence of 1.8 kb that is located immediately upstream of the inserted VSG gene contains sequences homologous to the 76-base-pair repeats described as being upstream of VSG genes in Trypanosoma brucei (D. A. Campbell, M. P. Van Bree, and J. C. Boothroyd, Nucleic Acids Res. 12:2759-2774). There are no such sequences elsewhere in the 11-kb cloned region. Southern blot analysis using probes from the cloned region revealed multiple unlinked copies of the same or very similar regions. At least three of these are located near telomeres, and two have been shown to be used for the expression of known Trypanosoma equiperdum VSG genes. Like VSG genes, the upstream sequences themselves can be duplicated and deleted. The choice of expression site to be used by a duplicated VSG gene is nonrandom; the site used for expression of the parental VSG gene is strongly favored for use in the daughter variant. Furthermore, even when the parental expression site is not used, the VSG gene occupying it is replaced. Thus, an active expression site is a preferential target for gene conversion in the next variation event.
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