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Nucleic Acids Research, 1991, Vol. 19, No. 18 4895-4900
© 1991


MOLECULAR BIOLOGY

The structure of a gene containing introns and encoding rat ribosomal protein P2

Yuen-Ling Chan and Ira G. Wool*

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The University of Chicago Chicago, IL 60637, USA

*To whom correspondence should be addressed

Received June 28, 1991. Accepted August 8, 1991.

The single rat ribosomal protein P2 gene containing introns has been characterized. It has 2275 nucleotldes distributed in 5 exons and 4 introns. The sequence of amino acids encoded in the exons corresponds exactly to that derived before from a cDNA. Only this one P2 gene in a family of approximately 9 members has introns and is expressed. There are two transcriptional start sites (adjacent cytidine residues) located in a tract of 10 pyrimldlnes flanked by GC-rich regions. The P2 gene, like other mammalian ribosomal protein genes, lacks a TATA box; however, it has at positions –30 to –27 the sequence TTTA which may be a degenerate TATA box and may serve the same function. The architecture of the P2 gene, and especially the structure of the promoter region, resembles that of other mammalian ribosomal protein genes. This suggests that the common features contribute to the coordinate regulation of their transcription and that the stoichiometry of P2 (it is present in 2 copies in the ribosome) is achieved by regulation of the translation of Its mRNA.


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