Abstract

Restriction ondonuclease EcoRI was used to study the structure of the free ribosomal DNA molecules from Tetrahymena pyriformis, strain GL. From the following observations we conclude that the free rDNA molecules from Tetrahymena are giant palindromes ‡ ‡ The term palindrome is defined as a word or sentence reading the same in both directions. We apply this term to those double-stranded DNA regions with an axis of 2-fold rotational symmetry, since only such regions will reud (transcribe) identically from bot,h ends of the region, e.g. ▪ , each containing two genes for preribosomal RNA arranged in rotational symmetry as inverted repeating sequences. Analyses of the sizes of products of partial or complete digestion and quantitative analyses of the products of complete digestion of uniformly 32P-labeled rDNA yielded an RI endonucleolytic cleavage map which showed that the EcoRI recognition sites are arranged symmetrically about the center of the rDNA molecule. When heat-denatured rDNA was rapidly cooled under conditions in which no renaturation would occur between separated complementary strands of DNA, molecules of half the size of the original rDNA molecule were produced. These were double-stranded DNA molecules as evidenced by their resistance to digestion with S1 nuclease. Moreover, they could be digested with EcoRI to produce fragments of sizes which would be predicted from the assumption that each single strand of the original rDNA molecule had folded back on itself to form a “hair-pin” double-stranded DNA structure. Hybridization experiments between ribosomal RNA and purified rDNA showed that each rDNA molecule contains two genes for rDNA. Hybridization of the isolated EcoRI fragments of rDNA with 25 S or 17 S rRNA suggested that the two structural genes for 17 S rRNA are located near the center of the rDNA molecule and the two genes for 25 S rRNA are found in distal positions.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call