Author:
Knowles J A,Lai Z C,Childs G J
Abstract
We cloned and characterized the gene encoding H1-gamma, a late histone subtype of the sea urchin species Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. The predicted primary sequence of H1-gamma is 216 amino acids in length and has a net charge of +70, which is high for a somatic H1 histone. The H1-gamma gene appears to be a unique sequence gene that is not tightly linked to the core histone genes. The 770-base-pair transcribed region of the H1-gamma gene is bordered on the 5' side by two previously described H1-specific sequence elements and on the 3' side by a hairpin loop structure and CAGA box sequences. We detected 3,900 stored maternal H1-gamma mRNA transcripts per egg. The number of H1-gamma transcripts per embryo rises by 9.5 h postfertilization, but the maximum rate of accumulation (4,300 molecules per min per embryo) occurs in the late-blastula-stage embryo between 14 and 21 h after fertilization. The number of H1-gamma mRNA molecules peaks 21 h after fertilization when there are 2.0 X 10(6) molecules per embryo (a 500-fold increase) and then decreases over the next 3.25 h to 1.3 million molecules per embryo. Between 24 and 82 h after fertilization the number of H1-gamma transcripts declines steadily (210 molecules per min per embryo) to reach approximately 5.4 X 10(5) H1-gamma mRNAs by 82 h postfertilization. Surprisingly, the number of late H1 mRNA molecules per embryo is greater than the number of late H2B mRNA molecules beginning at the early gastrula stage of development.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
33 articles.
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