Abstract

In Drosophila melanogaster embryos we have identified three classes of extrachromosomal circular DNA molecules homologous to the three main families of tandemly repeated genes, 5 S, rDNA and histone. 5 S genes are present in circular multimeric molecules containing up to 16 copies of the 375(±7) base-pair repeated unit. Circular molecules homologous to rDNA are also multimeric molecules, which contain up to ten copies of the 240 base-pair tandemly repeated sequence of the non-transcribed spacer. The two major genomic classes of histone units (4800 and 5000 bases) are found only as monomeric circular molecules. No circular intermediate of the I transposable element was detected in embryos laid by f 1 dysgenic females produced by the I-R system of hybrid dysgenesis. As far as we know, it is the first time that genes have been identified among extrachromosomal circular molecules independently of any specific amplification phenomenon.

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