Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.

Using rat cDNA and genomic probes to screen a human liver cDNA library, we have isolated clone of 2,274, 855, and 736 base pairs (bp) coding for the A alpha, B beta and gamma chains of human fibrinogen. Sequence analysis reveals a hitherto unrecognized extension of 15 amino acids at the carboxyl terminus of the A alpha chain, the terminal residue of which is proline. This brings the known length of the human A alpha chain to 625 amino acids. The 13-amino-acid repeated region in the midportion of the A alpha chain clearly has arisen through an 8-fold duplication of a 39-bp genetic element, which itself appears to have been constructed from smaller 6-bp repeating units. Greater than 50% sequence homology between B beta- and gamma-chain coding regions confirms postulates that these genes have arisen by duplication and subsequent divergence of an ancestral gene. A comparison of human and rat gamma-chain cDNAs shows more than 88% sequence homology over the carboxyl-terminal 162 amino acids, implying strong selective pressures on these portions of the gamma-chain gene.

Source:http://purl.uniprot.org/citations/6575389

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Using rat cDNA and genomic probes to screen a human liver cDNA library, we have isolated clone of 2,274, 855, and 736 base pairs (bp) coding for the A alpha, B beta and gamma chains of human fibrinogen. Sequence analysis reveals a hitherto unrecognized extension of 15 amino acids at the carboxyl terminus of the A alpha chain, the terminal residue of which is proline. This brings the known length of the human A alpha chain to 625 amino acids. The 13-amino-acid repeated region in the midportion of the A alpha chain clearly has arisen through an 8-fold duplication of a 39-bp genetic element, which itself appears to have been constructed from smaller 6-bp repeating units. Greater than 50% sequence homology between B beta- and gamma-chain coding regions confirms postulates that these genes have arisen by duplication and subsequent divergence of an ancestral gene. A comparison of human and rat gamma-chain cDNAs shows more than 88% sequence homology over the carboxyl-terminal 162 amino acids, implying strong selective pressures on these portions of the gamma-chain gene.
skos:exactMatch
uniprot:name
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.
uniprot:author
Crabtree G.R., Kant J.A., Lord S.T.
uniprot:date
1983
uniprot:pages
3953-3957
uniprot:title
Partial mRNA sequences for human A alpha, B beta, and gamma fibrinogen chains: evolutionary and functional implications.
uniprot:volume
80
dc-term:identifier
doi:10.1073/pnas.80.13.3953