Seattle BioMed

A novel telomeric gene conversion in Trypanosoma brucei

Authors: 

Scholler JK, Myler PJ, Stuart KD

Journal: 

Mol Biochem Parasitol

Publication date: 
June 1989

Gene conversion is one mechanism of antigenic variation in Trypanosoma brucei. Variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) genes are duplicated by this process to telomeric locations from which they may be expressed. We examined four independent antigenic switches in which the IsTaR 1.1 minichromosomal VSG gene is duplicated to a large chromosome where it is expressed. An unusual feature of three of these telomeric gene conversions is that the distance between the VSG gene and the end of the chromosome is identical for both the basic and duplicated copies following the antigenic switch. This suggests that the gene conversion is initiated 5' to the VSG gene and extends to the end of the telomere. The data also suggest that events other than simple nucleotide addition account for telomeric growth.