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Cytogenetic repartition of chicken CR1 sequences evidenced by PRINS in Galliformes and some other birds. / Coullin, Philippe; Bed'Hom, B.; Candelier, J. J.; Vettese, D.; Maucolin, S.; Moulin, S.; Galkina, S. A.; Bernheim, A.; Volobouev, V.

In: Chromosome Research, Vol. 13, No. 7, 01.10.2005, p. 665-673.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Coullin, P, Bed'Hom, B, Candelier, JJ, Vettese, D, Maucolin, S, Moulin, S, Galkina, SA, Bernheim, A & Volobouev, V 2005, 'Cytogenetic repartition of chicken CR1 sequences evidenced by PRINS in Galliformes and some other birds', Chromosome Research, vol. 13, no. 7, pp. 665-673. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10577-005-1004-7

APA

Coullin, P., Bed'Hom, B., Candelier, J. J., Vettese, D., Maucolin, S., Moulin, S., Galkina, S. A., Bernheim, A., & Volobouev, V. (2005). Cytogenetic repartition of chicken CR1 sequences evidenced by PRINS in Galliformes and some other birds. Chromosome Research, 13(7), 665-673. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10577-005-1004-7

Vancouver

Coullin P, Bed'Hom B, Candelier JJ, Vettese D, Maucolin S, Moulin S et al. Cytogenetic repartition of chicken CR1 sequences evidenced by PRINS in Galliformes and some other birds. Chromosome Research. 2005 Oct 1;13(7):665-673. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10577-005-1004-7

Author

Coullin, Philippe ; Bed'Hom, B. ; Candelier, J. J. ; Vettese, D. ; Maucolin, S. ; Moulin, S. ; Galkina, S. A. ; Bernheim, A. ; Volobouev, V. / Cytogenetic repartition of chicken CR1 sequences evidenced by PRINS in Galliformes and some other birds. In: Chromosome Research. 2005 ; Vol. 13, No. 7. pp. 665-673.

BibTeX

@article{324711edca244b39b70080577e4a33a4,
title = "Cytogenetic repartition of chicken CR1 sequences evidenced by PRINS in Galliformes and some other birds",
abstract = "Chicken repeat 1 (CR1) belongs to the non-long repeat class of retrotransposons. Nearly 100000 repeats interspersed in the chicken genome are subdivided into at least six distinct subfamilies, each 300 bp long and all sharing substantial sequence similarity. CR1-like elements were found in genomes from invertebrates to mammals, suggesting their importance for genome structure and/or function. Moreover, numerous data support the hypothesis of their implication in regulation of gene expression. So, the chromosomal distribution of these CR1 sequences in vertebrates is of great interest to improve our knowledge about the genome structure, function and evolution. A comparison of the cytogenetic distribution of CR1 sequences was performed by PRINS using consensus chicken primers on the chromosomes of chicken and species of several bird orders: Galliformes, Anseriformes, Passeriformes and Falconiformes. The study revealed that CR1 repeats are spread over nearly all chicken chromosomes with a higher density on the macrochromosomes and in particular with hot spots on subtelomeric regions of chromosome 1, 2, 3q, 4q, 5q. Their distribution on the macrochromosomes forms a kind of banding pattern, which was not systematically matched with R- or G-banding. This banding pattern appears to be conserved on the chromosomes of the Galliformes studied, irrespective of their karyotypes, rearranged or not. CR1 primers also show similar signals on the chromosomes of birds phylogenetically more distant (Anseriformes, Passeriformes and Falconiformes). This fact confirms the importance of these sequences at the large scale of bird evolution and in the chromosomal structure. The location of CR1 sequences, and in particular of the hot spots, mainly within the richest CG areas are in conformity with the data on an epigenetic role of these highly conserved sequences.",
keywords = "Birds, Chicken, CR1 sequences, Galliformes, PRINS",
author = "Philippe Coullin and B. Bed'Hom and Candelier, {J. J.} and D. Vettese and S. Maucolin and S. Moulin and Galkina, {S. A.} and A. Bernheim and V. Volobouev",
year = "2005",
month = oct,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1007/s10577-005-1004-7",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "665--673",
journal = "Chromosome Research",
issn = "0967-3849",
publisher = "Springer Nature",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cytogenetic repartition of chicken CR1 sequences evidenced by PRINS in Galliformes and some other birds

AU - Coullin, Philippe

AU - Bed'Hom, B.

AU - Candelier, J. J.

AU - Vettese, D.

AU - Maucolin, S.

AU - Moulin, S.

AU - Galkina, S. A.

AU - Bernheim, A.

AU - Volobouev, V.

PY - 2005/10/1

Y1 - 2005/10/1

N2 - Chicken repeat 1 (CR1) belongs to the non-long repeat class of retrotransposons. Nearly 100000 repeats interspersed in the chicken genome are subdivided into at least six distinct subfamilies, each 300 bp long and all sharing substantial sequence similarity. CR1-like elements were found in genomes from invertebrates to mammals, suggesting their importance for genome structure and/or function. Moreover, numerous data support the hypothesis of their implication in regulation of gene expression. So, the chromosomal distribution of these CR1 sequences in vertebrates is of great interest to improve our knowledge about the genome structure, function and evolution. A comparison of the cytogenetic distribution of CR1 sequences was performed by PRINS using consensus chicken primers on the chromosomes of chicken and species of several bird orders: Galliformes, Anseriformes, Passeriformes and Falconiformes. The study revealed that CR1 repeats are spread over nearly all chicken chromosomes with a higher density on the macrochromosomes and in particular with hot spots on subtelomeric regions of chromosome 1, 2, 3q, 4q, 5q. Their distribution on the macrochromosomes forms a kind of banding pattern, which was not systematically matched with R- or G-banding. This banding pattern appears to be conserved on the chromosomes of the Galliformes studied, irrespective of their karyotypes, rearranged or not. CR1 primers also show similar signals on the chromosomes of birds phylogenetically more distant (Anseriformes, Passeriformes and Falconiformes). This fact confirms the importance of these sequences at the large scale of bird evolution and in the chromosomal structure. The location of CR1 sequences, and in particular of the hot spots, mainly within the richest CG areas are in conformity with the data on an epigenetic role of these highly conserved sequences.

AB - Chicken repeat 1 (CR1) belongs to the non-long repeat class of retrotransposons. Nearly 100000 repeats interspersed in the chicken genome are subdivided into at least six distinct subfamilies, each 300 bp long and all sharing substantial sequence similarity. CR1-like elements were found in genomes from invertebrates to mammals, suggesting their importance for genome structure and/or function. Moreover, numerous data support the hypothesis of their implication in regulation of gene expression. So, the chromosomal distribution of these CR1 sequences in vertebrates is of great interest to improve our knowledge about the genome structure, function and evolution. A comparison of the cytogenetic distribution of CR1 sequences was performed by PRINS using consensus chicken primers on the chromosomes of chicken and species of several bird orders: Galliformes, Anseriformes, Passeriformes and Falconiformes. The study revealed that CR1 repeats are spread over nearly all chicken chromosomes with a higher density on the macrochromosomes and in particular with hot spots on subtelomeric regions of chromosome 1, 2, 3q, 4q, 5q. Their distribution on the macrochromosomes forms a kind of banding pattern, which was not systematically matched with R- or G-banding. This banding pattern appears to be conserved on the chromosomes of the Galliformes studied, irrespective of their karyotypes, rearranged or not. CR1 primers also show similar signals on the chromosomes of birds phylogenetically more distant (Anseriformes, Passeriformes and Falconiformes). This fact confirms the importance of these sequences at the large scale of bird evolution and in the chromosomal structure. The location of CR1 sequences, and in particular of the hot spots, mainly within the richest CG areas are in conformity with the data on an epigenetic role of these highly conserved sequences.

KW - Birds

KW - Chicken

KW - CR1 sequences

KW - Galliformes

KW - PRINS

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=26944434305&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1007/s10577-005-1004-7

DO - 10.1007/s10577-005-1004-7

M3 - Article

C2 - 16235116

AN - SCOPUS:26944434305

VL - 13

SP - 665

EP - 673

JO - Chromosome Research

JF - Chromosome Research

SN - 0967-3849

IS - 7

ER -

ID: 41459514