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Published May 1, 1980 | public
Journal Article

Complexity of RNA in Eggs of Drosophila Melanogaster and Musca Domestica

Abstract

Comparative measurements are presented of the sequence complexity of the RNA stored in the eggs of two dipteran flies, Musca domestica and Drosophila melanogaster. The genome of Musca is about five times the size of the Drosophila genome and contains about 3.6 times as much single-copy sequence. As shown earlier, the interspersion of repetitive and single-copy sequence is of the short-period form in Musca, and is of the long-period form in Drosophila. The egg RNA complexities were determined by hybridization of excess RNA with radioactively labeled single-copy DNA. Complexity is expressed as the length (in nucleotides) of diverse single-copy sequence represented in the RNA. The complexity of the RNA of the Musca egg is about 2.4 x 10^7 nucleotides, and that of the Drosophila egg is about 1.2 x 10^7 nucleotides. The RNA of the Musca egg is similar to or very slightly lower in complexity than that of other egg RNAs, e.g., those of Xenopus and sea urchin. Compared to all previously measured egg RNAs, Drosophila egg RNA is low in sequence complexity.

Additional Information

© 1980 Genetics Society of America. Manuscript received August 27, 1979. Revised copy received November 28, 1979. Corresponding editor: M. L. Pardue. We thank Randy R. Robinson and N. David Hershey for generous gifts of Drosophila DNA and Drosophila nonrepetitive DNA. This research was supported by Public Health Service Grants HD-05753 and GM-25327.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023