Is the human dystrophin gene's intron structure related to its intron instability?
- Author:
Wenli SHENG
1
;
Jiangying CHEN
;
Liangfu ZHU
;
Zhuolin LIU
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Dystrophin; genetics; Humans; Introns; genetics; Sequence Deletion
- From: Chinese Medical Journal 2003;116(11):1733-1736
- CountryChina
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo study the human dystrophin gene molecular deletion mechanism, we analyzed breakpoint regions within junction fragments of deletion-type patients and investigated whether the dystrophin gene's intron structure might be related to intron instability.
METHODSJunction fragments corresponding to exon 46 and 51 deletions were cloned. The breakpoint regions were sequenced, and the features of introns with available Genebank sequences were analyzed.
RESULTSAn analysis of junction fragment sequences corresponding to exon 46 and 51 deletions showed that all 5' and 3' breakpoints are located within repeat sequences. No small insertions, small deletions, or point mutations are located near the breakpoint junctions. By analyzing the secondary structure of the junction fragments, we demonstrated that all junction fragment breakpoints are located in non-matching regions of single-stranded hairpin loops. A high concentration of repetitive elements is found to be a key feature of many dystrophin introns. In total, 34.8% of the overall dystrophin intron sequences is composed of repeat sequences.
CONCLUSIONRepeat elements in many dystrophin gene introns are the key to their structural bases and reflect intron instability. As a result of the primary DNA sequences, single-stranded hairpin loops form, increasing the instability of the gene, and forming the base for breaks in the DNA. The formation of the single-stranded hairpins can result in reattachment of two different breakpoints, producing a deletion.