RESEARCH
The Comparative Genomic Structure and Sequence of the Surfeit
Gene Homologs in the Puffer Fish Fugu rubripes and their
Association with CpG-Rich Islands
Niall
Armes,1
Jonathan
Gilley,1 and
Mike
Fried2
Eukaryotic Gene Organisation and Expression Laboratory, Imperial
Cancer Research Fund, Lincoln's Inn Fields, London WC2A 3PX, UK
The puffer fish Fugu rubripes (Fugu) has a
compact genome approximately one-seventh the size of man, mainly owing
to small intron size and the presence of few dispersed repetitive DNA
elements, which greatly facilitates the study of its genes at the
genomic level. It has been shown previously that, whereas the Surfeit genes are tightly clustered at a single locus in mammals and birds, the
genes are found at three separate loci in the Fugu genome. Here, Fugu gene homologs of all six Surfeit genes
(Surf-1 to Surf-6) have been cloned and sequenced,
and their gene structure has been compared with that of their mammalian
and avian homologs. The predicted protein products of each gene are
well conserved between vertebrate species, and in most cases their gene
structures are identical to their mammalian and avian homologs except
for the Fugu Surf-6 gene, which was found to lack an intron
present in the mouse gene. In addition, we have identified conserved
regulatory elements at the 5 and 3 ends of the
Surf-3/rpL7a gene by comparison with the mammalian and chicken
Surf-3/rpL7a gene homologs, including the presence of a
polypyrimidine tract at the extreme 5 end of this ribosomal
protein gene. The Fugu Surfeit gene homologs appear to be
associated with CpG-rich islands, like the Surfeit genes in higher
vertebrates, but these Fugu CpG islands are similar to the
nonclassical islands characteristic of other fish species. Our
observations support the use of the Fugu genome to study
vertebrate gene structure, to predict the structure of mammalian genes,
and to identify vertebrate regulatory elements.
[The sequence
data described in this paper have been submitted to the data library
under accession nos. Y15170 (Surf-2, Surf-4), Y15171
(Surf-3, Surf-1, Surf-6), and Y15172
(Surf-5.)]

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