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. 1982 Jun 11;10(11):3503–3515. doi: 10.1093/nar/10.11.3503

Comparison of the nucleotide sequence of cloned human and guinea-pig pre-alpha-lactalbumin cDNA with that of chick pre-lysozyme cDNA suggests evolution from a common ancestral gene.

L Hall, R K Craig, M R Edbrooke, P N Campbell
PMCID: PMC320727  PMID: 6285305

Abstract

Nucleotide sequence analyses of essentially full-length copies of human and guinea-pig pre-alpha-lactalbumin cDNAs contained within recombinant plasmids, (i) confirm the presence of 19 amino acid hydrophobic amino terminal peptide extensions encoded within each mRNA; and (ii) provides evidence for the existence of a minor variant of guinea-pig alpha-lactalbumin mRNA encoding a protein with a 36 residue carboxyl-terminal extension. Comparison of the nucleotide sequence within the coding region of the human, and the predominant guinea-pig pre-alpha-lactalbumin mRNAs, with the analogous region of hen pre-lysozyme mRNA provides compelling evidence that all have evolved from a common ancestral gene.

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Selected References

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