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Mol. Cell. Biol., Apr 1995, 2109-2116, Vol 15, No. 4
DY Chang, N Sasaki-Tozawa, LK Green and RJ Maraia
Nearly 1 million Alu elements in human DNA were inserted by an RNA-
mediated retroposition-amplification process that clearly decelerated about
30 million years ago. Since then, Alu sequences have proliferated at a
lower rate, including within the human genome, in which Alu mobility
continues to generate genetic variability. Initially derived from 7SL RNA
of the signal recognition particle (SRP), Alu became a dominant retroposon
while retaining secondary structures found in 7SL RNA. We previously
identified a human Alu RNA-binding protein as a homolog of the 14-kDa
Alu-specific protein of SRP and have shown that its expression is
associated with accumulation of 3'-processed Alu RNA. Here, we show that in
early anthropoids, the gene encoding SRP14 Alu RNA-binding protein was
duplicated and that SRP14-homologous sequences currently reside on
different human chromosomes. In anthropoids, the active SRP14 gene acquired
a GCA trinucleotide repeat in its 3'-coding region that produces SRP14
polypeptides with extended C-terminal tails. A C-->G substitution in
this region converted the mouse sequence CCA GCA to GCA GCA in prosimians,
which presumably predisposed this locus to GCA expansion in anthropoids and
provides a model for other triplet expansions. Moreover, the presence of
the trinucleotide repeat in SRP14 DNA and the corresponding C-terminal tail
in SRP14 are associated with a significant increase in SRP14 polypeptide
and Alu RNA-binding activity. These genetic events occurred during the
period in which an acceleration in Alu retroposition was followed by a
sharp deceleration, suggesting that Alu repeats coevolved with C-terminal
variants of SRP14 in higher primates.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
A trinucleotide repeat-associated increase in the level of Alu RNA- binding protein occurred during the same period as the major Alu amplification that accompanied anthropoid evolution
Laboratory of Molecular Growth Regulation, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-2753.
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