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Vol. 58, Issue 1, 89-97, July 2000
Departments of Chemistry & Biochemistry and Pharmacology, Cancer
Center, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California
The UGT1 locus is felt to be highly conserved between
species, as is evident from the characterization of the locus in
rodents and humans. In rabbits, cDNAs encoding proteins homologous to human UGT1A4, UGT1A6, and UGT1A7 have previously been identified. Here
we demonstrate by Southern blot analysis, using exon 1 divergent 5'
segments from rabbit UGT1A4 and UGT1A6 cDNAs, the existence of a
cluster of highly related genes that are homologous to each of these
exon 1 sequences. In comparing rabbit and human, it is evident that the
UGT1A4 and UGT1A6 gene clusters in rabbit
have undergone gene duplication. This is particularly evident with rabbit UGT1A6. The human UGT1A6 cDNA
anneals to only a single gene fragment, as displayed by Southern blot
analysis, indicating that the UGT1A6 exon 1 sequence is
highly conserved. However, up to six rabbit UGT1A6 genes
could be predicted from Southern blot analysis. To examine the
potential linkage of the rabbit UGT1A6 genes, multiple
UGT1A6 exons were identified from genomic DNA by
extended polymerase chain reaction techniques and cloning of the
UGT1A6 exon 1 sequences. Five unique
UGT1A6 exon 1 gene sequences were characterized that
could be predicted to encode proteins that are 98% similar in amino
acid structure. Using a conserved region of the rabbit
UGT1A6 cDNA as a probe to screen cDNA libraries, we
identified a second UGT1A6 cDNA, termed
UGT1A6
. In addition, a cDNA that encodes a protein
similar to human UGT1A3 was also cloned. Characterization of UGT1A6
demonstrated the protein to be 98.9% identical to UGT1A6. The
expression of rabbit UGT1A3, UGT1A4, and UGT1A6 displayed catalytic
activities similar to their human orthologs. However, UGT1A6
was
catalytically divergent from UGT1A6, indicating that UGT1A6 and
UGT1A6
do not arise from allelic polymorphism. These results
demonstrate that lagomorphs have evolved at least five additional
UGT1A6 genes, an event that is not duplicated in rodents
or humans.
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