Genome Res. 13:2030-2041, 2003
©2003 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press; ISSN 1088-9051/03 $5.00
Letter
Conserved Noncoding Sequences in the Grasses4
Dan Choffnes Inada1,
Ali Bashir1,
Chunghau Lee1,
Brian C. Thomas2,
Cynthia Ko3,
Stephen A. Goff3 and
Michael Freeling1,5
1 Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California,
Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720, USA
2 College of Natural Resources, University of California, Berkeley,
Berkeley, California 94720, USA
3 Torrey Mesa Research Institute, Syngenta Corporation, San Diego,
California, USA
As orthologous genes from related species diverge over time, some sequences
are conserved in noncoding regions. In mammals, large phylogenetic footprints,
or conserved noncoding sequences (CNSs), are
known to be common features of genes. Here we present the first large-scale
analysis of plant genes for CNSs. We used maize and rice, maximally diverged
members of the grass family of monocots. Using a local sequence alignment set
to deliver only significant alignments, we found one or more CNSs in the
noncoding regions of the majority of genes studied. Grass genes have
dramatically fewer and much smaller CNSs than mammalian genes. Twenty-seven
percent of grass gene comparisons revealed no CNSs. Genes functioning in
upstream regulatory roles, such as transcription factors, are greatly enriched
for CNSs relative to genes encoding enzymes or structural proteins. Further,
we show that a CNS cluster in an intron of the knotted1 homeobox gene
serves as a site of negative regulation. We showthat CNSs in the adh1
gene do not correlate with known cis-acting sites. We discuss the
potential meanings of CNSs and their value as analytical tools and
evolutionary characters. We advance the idea that many CNSs function to
lock-in gene regulatory decisions.
Article and publication are at
http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.1280703.
[Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org.]
4 Present address: Syngenta Biotechnology, Research Triangle Park, NC
27713, USA.
5 Corresponding author. E-MAIL
freeling{at}nature.berkeley.edu;
FAX (510) 642-4995.

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