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Palindrome

About: Palindrome is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 227 publications have been published within this topic receiving 3839 citations.


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TL;DR: The properties of 67 members of a family of dispersed repetitive palindromic extragenic bacterial DNA sequences, which appear to be present at least several hundred times outside structural genes on the Escherichia coli chromosome, are reported.
Abstract: We report the properties of 67 members of a family of dispersed repetitive palindromic extragenic bacterial DNA sequences. These sequences, called palindromic units, appear to be present at least several hundred times outside structural genes on the Escherichia coli chromosome. They are found either in clusters - as in a previously described intercistronic element - or in single occurrences. They are not only found within an operon but also between different operons, including between convergent ones. The palindromic units could yield a stem and loop structure at the level of DNA or RNA. The base of the stem is made of eight remarkably conserved base pairs while the rest varies somewhat in length and sequence. We analyse the data available on the palindromic units and we speculate on their possible roles with emphasis on transcription and mRNA stability or processing, as well as on their possible relation to transposition elements and the modular evolution of the genome.

232 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that the ability of mammalian cells to eliminate the perfect symmetry in a palindromic sequence may be an important DNA repair pathway, with implications regarding the metabolism of palindromaic repeats, the mutability of quasipalindromo triplet repeats, and the early steps in gene amplification events.
Abstract: Genetic instability is promoted by unusual sequence arrangements and DNA structures. Hairpin DNA structures can form from palindromes and from triplet repeats, and they are also intermediates in V(D)J recombination. We have measured the genetic stability of a large palindrome which has the potential to form a one-stranded hairpin or a two-stranded cruciform structure and have analyzed recombinants at the molecular level. A palindrome of 15.3 kb introduced as a transgene was found to be transmitted at a normal Mendelian ratio in mice, in striking contrast to the profound instability of large palindromes in prokaryotic systems. In a significant number of progeny mice, however, the palindromic transgene is rearranged; between 15 and 56% of progeny contain rearrangements. Rearrangements within the palindromic repeat occur both by illegitimate and homologous, reciprocal recombination. Gene conversion within the transgene locus, as quantitated by a novel sperm fluorescence assay, is also elevated. Illegitimate events often take the form of an asymmetric deletion that eliminates the central symmetry of the palindrome. Such asymmetric transgene deletions, including those that maintain one complete half of the palindromic repeat, are stabilized so that they cannot undergo further illegitimate rearrangements, and they also exhibit reduced levels of gene conversion. By contrast, transgene rearrangements that maintain the central symmetry continue to be unstable. Based on the observed events, we propose that one mechanism promoting the instability of the palindrome may involve breaks generated at the hairpin structure by a hairpin-nicking activity, as previously detected in somatic cells. Because mammalian cells are capable of efficiently repairing chromosome breaks through nonhomologous processes, the resealing of such breaks introduces a stabilizing asymmetry at the center of the palindrome. We propose that the ability of mammalian cells to eliminate the perfect symmetry in a palindromic sequence may be an important DNA repair pathway, with implications regarding the metabolism of palindromic repeats, the mutability of quasipalindromic triplet repeats, and the early steps in gene amplification events.

170 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is likely that the palindromic ATRRs produce unstable DNA structures in 22q11 and 11q23 that are responsible for the recurrent t(11;22) translocation, suggesting instability of this region in bacterial clones.
Abstract: The constitutional t(11;22)(q23;q11) is the only known recurrent, non-Robertsonian translocation. To analyze the genomic structure of the breakpoint, we have cloned the junction fragments from the der(11) and der(22) of a t(11;22) balanced carrier. On chromosome 11 the translocation occurs within a short, palindromic AT-rich region (ATRR). Likewise, the breakpoint on chromosome 22 has been localized within an ATRR that is part of a larger palindrome. Interestingly, the 22q11 breakpoint falls within one of the 'unclonable' gaps in the genomic sequence. Further, a sequenced chromosome 11 BAC clone, spanning the t(11;22) breakpoint in 11q23, is deleted within the palindromic ATRR, suggesting instability of this region in bacterial clones. Several unrelated t(11;22) families demonstrate similar breakpoints on both chromosomes, indicating that their translocations are within the same palindrome. It is likely that the palindromic ATRRs produce unstable DNA structures in 22q11 and 11q23 that are responsible for the recurrent t(11;22) translocation.

159 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The known results are surveyed and new results for some sequences are obtained, in particular for Rote sequences and for fixed points of primitive morphisms of constant length belonging to "class P" of Hof-Knill-Simon.

139 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that the combined presence of the two promoters, the alternating palindrome structure and the factor for inversion stimulation-binding site, all permit the expression of the mazEF module to be sensitively regulated under various growth conditions.

137 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202365
2022148
202113
20205
201911
20187