14 research outputs found
Structural organization of the bovine thyroglobulin gene and of its 5'-flanking region.
The structural organization of the bovine thyroglobulin gene has been investigated by a combination of Southern genomic blotting and direct analysis of cloned gene fragments isolated from a chromosomal DNA library. The entire locus is spread over more than 200,000 base pairs which makes it one of the largest eukaryotic genes studies to date. The coding information is scattered into at least 42 exons, 34 of which have been precisely identified. A different evolutionary origin of the 5' and 3' regions of the gene is supported by the highly different proportion of exonic material they contain (12% and 3%, respectively) and by the existence of sequence homology between the 3' region of thyroglobulin and acetylcholinesterase. Detailed sequence analysis of the 5' region of the gene and its flanking segment demonstrated that a significant homology exists between bovine and human thyroglobulin sequences, except for the presence within the ruminant promoter region of a 220-base-pair sequence belonging to the bovine monomer repeated family.Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tResearch Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
Defective splicing of thyroglobulin gene transcripts in the congenital goitre of the Afrikander cattle.
The structure of thyroglobulin mRNA was analyzed in an inbred herd of Afrikander cattle with hereditary goitre. Northern transfer of RNA from affected animals revealed both a shorter (approximately 7100 bases) and a normal-sized (approximately 8200 bases) thyroglobulin mRNA when hybridized to bovine thyroglobulin cDNA clones. S1 nuclease mapping experiments established that 1100 bases are deleted in the 5' region of the smaller mRNA. Electron microscopy of RNA from animals with goitre hybridized to a bovine genomic DNA clone showed that the region deleted corresponds to exon 9 of the thyroglobulin gene. Southern blot analysis of the exon 9 region revealed differences between affected and control animals with the enzymes PstI and TaqI. Although they could reflect a linkage disequilibrium between the mutation and restriction fragment length polymorphism, it is noteworthy that these differences map in the region of the exon 9/intron 9 junction. Our results show that a genetic lesion in the thyroglobulin gene causes aberrant splicing of the pre-mRNA, and suggest that the responsible mutation is at the exon 9/intron 9 junction