High frequency intragenic recombination during macronuclear development in Tetrahymena thermophila restores the wild-type SerH1 gene

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Abstract

Macronuclear development in ciliates is characterized by extensive rearrangement of genetic material, including sequence elimination, chromosome fragmentation and telomere addition. Intragenic recombination is a relatively rare, but evolutionarily important phenomenon occurring in mitosis and meiosis in a wide variety of organisms. Here, we show that high frequency intragenic recombination, on the order of 30%, occurs in the developing amitotic macronucleus of the ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila. Such recombination, occurring between two nonsense transition mutations separated by 726 nucleotides, reproducibly restores wild-type expression of the SerH1 surface protein gene, thus mimicking complementation in trans heterozygotes. Recombination must be considered a potentially important aspect of macronuclear development, producing gene combinations not present in the germinal micronucleus.

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Deak, J. C., & Doerder, F. P. (1998). High frequency intragenic recombination during macronuclear development in Tetrahymena thermophila restores the wild-type SerH1 gene. Genetics, 148(3), 1109–1115. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/148.3.1109

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