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    Mol Gen Genet. 1997 Jan 27;253(4):492-8.

    The S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine hydrolase of Drosophila melanogaster: identification, deduced amino acid sequence and cytological localization of the structural gene.

    Caggese C, Ragone G, Barsanti P, Moschetti R, Messina A, Massari S, Caizzi R.

    Istituto di Genetica, Università di Bari, Italy.

    S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine hydrolase (AdoHcyase, EC 3.3.1.1) catalyzes the hydrolysis of S-adeno-syl-L-homocysteine to adenosine and homocysteine and thus plays a crucial role in normal cellular metabolism. We have isolated the cDNA for Drosophila melanogaster AdoHcyase by screening a Drosophila ovarian expression library. The 1584-nucleotide cDNA encodes a protein of 431 amino acids, showing 80.5% identity with human AdoHcyase. Southern analysis of genomic DNA and in situ hybridization to salivary gland chromosomes indicate that a single gene encodes the D. melanogaster AdoHcyase. The gene resides in region 13C1-2 on the X chromosome. Transcript analysis shows a single AdoHcyase mRNA present in unfertilized eggs, and, at a more or less constant level of expression, in all developmental stages tested, ranging from early embryos to adults. The deduced amino acid sequence was compared to a putative AdoHcyase-like protein encoded by a cDNA mapping to the 89E region of the second chromosome and showing much lower similarity to known AdoHcyases. We discuss the hypothesis that a sequence that originated by duplication of an ancestral AdoHcyase gene has, in the course of evolution, been recruited to supply a different function.

    PMID: 9037110 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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