Muscling in on chromosomal clusters
-
Correspondence: Jonathan B Weitzman jonathanweitzman@hotmail.com
Genome Biology 2002, 3:spotlight-20020902-01 doi:10.1186/gb-spotlight-20020902-01
The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at:
| Published: | 2 September 2002 |
© 2002 BioMed Central Ltd
Research news
It is becoming increasing apparent that eukaryotic genomes are organized into regions containing clusters of co-regulated genes. In the August 29 Nature, Roy et al. describe clusters of muscle-expressing genes in the Caenorhabditis elegans genome (Nature 2002, 418:975-979). They developed a method called 'messenger RNA tagging' that uses immunoprecipitation of an epitope-tagged RNA-binding protein to purify mRNA expressed in different tissues; they then used DNA microarrays to analyse the enrichment of co-immunoprecipitated mRNAs. Roy et al. found over 1,000 genes that were consistently enriched in six muscle mRNA-tagging experiments. When they mapped the chromosomal locations of these genes, they found that almost a third of them are positioned within 10kb of another muscle-expressed gene. Many of the muscle genes are found in clusters of 2-5 genes, sometimes interrupted by a non-expressed gene. Additional analysis provided evidence for clustering of genes expressed in sperm or oocytes. Roy et al. speculate that gene clusters may represent regions of active chromatin.
References
-
Evidence for large domains of similarly expressed genes in the Drosophila genome.
PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text | PubMed Central Full Text
-
[http://www.nature.com] webcite
Nature
-
[http://cmgm.stanford.edu/~kimlab] webcite
The Kim Lab