Abstract
The cloning and characterization of the cytoplasmic 7 S RNAs of HeLa cells has provided pure probes to study the organization of the corresponding genomic DNA sequences. Such analysis has shown that the 7 S L and K RNAs are derived from families of middle repetitive DNA (Ullu & Melli, 1982; Ullu et al., 1982). In this work we analyze the evolutionary conservation of these sequences in the RNA and DNA of distantly related species. Hybridization of the 7 S recombinants to the RNA of rodents, birds, amphibians and echinoderms suggests high conservation of these sequences throughout evolution. Southern blot analysis of genomic DNAs from the same species shows the presence of families of repeated sequences homologous to the 7 S recombinants and Alu DNAs in the genomes of the same species. We were unable to hybridize the 7 S probes to the RNAs of Drosophila melanogaster or Dictyostelium discoideum, although sequence(s) homologous to the 7 S L probe were found in the genome of D. discoideum and to both 7 S L and K probes in the genome of D. melanogaster.