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Jumping Jordan Gene

By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence

St. Louis, MO (4/9/99)- Put Jordan under pressure and then watch for the jump shot, say Washington University researchers. In this case they are talking biology, not basketball.

Photo: Michael Jordan- Jumping Genes

Cell biologists David Kirk, Ph.D., and Stephen Miller, Ph.D., have named a a transposon, sometimes called a 'jumping gene' after the former Chicago Bulls star. The two researchers have managed a first, developing a new technique for controlling the activity of one kind of transposon, a discovery that should open new avenues in genetic research .

A transposon is a type of gene found in most living organisms. Under certain circumstances, this type of gene literally jumps from one chromosome to another. The researchers discovered what makes a transposon gene in Volvox, a green alga, want to jump. Moreover, by regulating the temperature of its environment they can make the Volvox gene jump on command.

"We found that simply by growing cultures of Volvox at lower temperatures, we can increase Jordan's jumping 30- to 50-fold. It's important to have Jordan jumping frequently because for every thousand times it jumps in Volvox, maybe only once will it land in a gene we're interested in," said Dr. Kirk.

After Jordan jumps, the scientists can determine where it lands by tracking its characteristic genetic signature.They can use the jumping Jordan gene to isolate genes of interest and study their form and function. The Jordan jumping gene has already helped the team to discover and analyze two important genes that play key roles in cell replication and specialization.

"Jordan has two special genetic sequences at its ends that permit the gene to cut its way out of a cell at one location and reinsert itself at another. That's what's called jumping. We can recognize the Jordan mutation in the gene where it lands, and then extract that gene's preexisting DNA and study it. Having Jordan in a gene gives us a handle to pull out the DNA of interest. That's how we found these two genes, and their discovery has led to a far deeper understanding of Volvox than we've ever had before." Explains Kirk.

The genes Jordan landed in are called glsA and regA. The first, glsA is essential for asymmetric division in Volvox, whereby only large cells become germ cells and only small cells become body cells. The glsA gene has a counterpart in humans called MPP11, which also plays a role in cell division. The human gene is more than 50 percent homologous with the Volvox gene.

"This was astonishing to us. The similarity is really close for organisms separated by at least one billion years of evolution. Only five other genes similar to glsA have been found throughout the biosphere, three in mammals and one each in fungi and algae," said Kirk.

The other gene Jordan jumped on is RegA. It prevent the body cells from becoming germ cells by harnessing the activity of 18 other genes that inhibit the formation of chloroplasts in the body cells. Volvox is a green alga, so it gets its energy from photosynthesis. Without the formation of new chloroplasts, the body cells have just a limited time to carry out their function and then they die.

"Volvox interests biologists because it has only two cell types, somatic or body cells that fulfill their functions and die within five days, and germ cells, which reproduce. This is what makes Volvox an important system. We're trying to get a big picture of basic cell development with just two cell types as opposed to trying to understand the basics in mammals where as many as 200 different cell types are developing all at once," explained Kirk.

An improved understanding of transposons could lead to using them as vectors for gene therapy. The work also has implication for cancer research since 50 percent of all spontaneous mutations are due to transposon insertions into other genes.

Transposons were first identified by Barbara McClintock in maize in 1943. She won the Nobel prize for this work in 1983.

The research appears in a recent issue of the journal Development.

Related information on the Internet
Transposons and Malaria
Jumping Genes, Bisexual Flies

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