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Molecular Biology and Evolution, Vol 11, 146-153, Copyright © 1994 by Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Molecular evolution of a Y-chromosomal repetitive sequence family in the genus Mus

Y Nishioka, BM Dolan, L Zahed, V Prado and H Tyson
Department of Biology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

A 522-base-long Y-chromosomal sequence was isolated from a BALB/c genomic library and was designated "BF046." It is repeated about 200 times in the male genome, and a difference was detected between the Mus musculus musculus and the M. m. domesticus type Y chromosomes. BF046- related sequences were present over the entire length of the Y chromosome as visualized by in situ hybridization. Southern blot analysis against DNAs isolated from eight species in the genus Mus showed that BF046-related sequences were amplified in the Y chromosomes of three closely related species: M. musculus, M. spicilegus, and M. spretus. To gain insight into the stability of the BF046 sequence family, we isolated 18 additional clones from these three mouse species and compared their sequences. The M. musculus sequences differed from the M. spicilegus and M. spretus sequences by two indels. The remaining parts of the sequences were very similar, but both parsimony and distance-based analytical methods divided the sequences into the same four subgroups, with each species having its own subgroup(s). Thus, the Y chromosomes of M. musculus, M. spicilegus, and M. spretus can be distinguished from one another.
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