Abstract

The haploid genome size of Artemia is determined to be about 0.9·10 12, as evidenced both by Feulgen microspectrophotometry of individual diploid class nuclei, which are but one of five polyploid classes present within the larvae, and by analysis of the reassociation kinetics of the isolated single copy DNA component. Polysomes isolated from 24-h incubation stage larvae contain an average of 10 ribosomes per messenger RNA molecule. Their rRNAs are found to have sedimentation coefficients of 18 S and 26 S, corresponding to molecular weights of 0.70·10 6 and 1.40·10 6, respectively, as determined by polyacrylamide electrophoresis and also by sucrose density centrifugation. Denaturation in glyoxal followed by agarose gel electrophoresis shows that unlike deuterostome rRNAs, Artemia 26 S rRNA contains a cryptic nick about midway in the molecule, which is not found in the 18 S molecule. Isolated rRNAs were labelled in vitro with 125I and hybridized with filter-immobilized DNA to saturation, which occurred at 0.051% for Xenopus, and at 0.074% for Artemia. From these results, it is calculated that in the haploid Artemia genome there are about 320 copies of the (18 S + 26 S) ribosomal RNA genes. Reciprocal heterologous hybridizations between these two species show that they share about 30% homology between their rDNA coding sequences.

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