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1.
In this study, we describe the identification and partial characterization of 101 potential human zinc finger protein genes (ZnFPs). These sequences were isolated by hybridization of cosmids, obtained from mouse-human cell lines enriched for chromosome 11p, with an oligonucleotide specific for the "link" sequence between contiguous zinc fingers. Sixty-nine of these cosmids were regionally localized to human prometaphase chromosomes by in situ hybridization. The localization of these cosmids suggests that a number of finger protein genes occur in linked clusters. Their assignment to chromosomes 3p, 11p, 19p, 19qter, 20p, and 21q makes them valuable as markers or "candidate" genes for diseases associated with these chromosome regions.  相似文献   

2.
Three members of the human zinc finger Krüppel family, ZNF11/KOX2, ZNF22/KOX15, and ZNF25/KOX19, have been regionally localized to the pericentromeric region of chromosome 10 by in situ chromosomal hybridization and somatic cell hybrid analysis. ZNF25/KOX19 is located centromeric to a breakpoint in chromosome band 10q11.2 in the chromosome region 10p11.2-q11.2, whereas ZNF22/KOX15 maps distal to it in band 10q11.2. Sequences hybridizing to the KOX2 probe are found at two loci, ZNF11A and ZNF11B, that map proximal and distal to the 10q11.2 breakpoint, respectively. The two ZNF11 loci probably represent two related sequences in 10p11.2-q11.2. This cluster of ZNF/KOX genes is of particular interest since the loci for multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2A and 2B (MEN2A and MEN2B) syndromes have been assigned to this region by linkage analysis.  相似文献   

3.
To better map the location of the von Recklinghausen neurofibromatosis (NF1) gene, we have characterized a somatic cell hybrid designated 7AE-11. This microcell-mediated, chromosome-transfer construct harbors a centromeric segment and a neo-marked segment from the distal long arm of human chromosome 17. We have identified 269 cosmid clones with human sequences from a 7AE-11 library and, using a panel of somatic cell hybrids with a total of six chromosome 17q breakpoints, have mapped 240 of these clones on chromosome 17q. The panel included a hybrid (NF13) carrying a der(22) chromosome that was isolated from an NF1 patient with a balanced translocation, t(17;22) (q11.2;q11.2). Fifty-three of the cosmids map into a region spanning the NF13 breakpoint, as defined by the two closest flanking breakpoints (17q11.2 and 17q11.2-q12). RFLP clones from a subset of these cosmids have been mapped by linkage analysis in normal reference families, to localize the NF1 gene more precisely and to enhance the potential for genetic diagnosis of this disorder. The cosmids in the NF1 region will be an important resource for testing DNA blots of large-fragment restriction-enzyme digests from NF1 patient cell lines, to detect rearrangements in patients' DNA and to identify the 17;22 NF1 translocation breakpoint.  相似文献   

4.
cDNA clones encoding zinc finger structures were isolated by screening Molt4 and Jurkat cDNA libraries with zinc finger consensus sequences. Candidate clones were partially sequenced to verify the presence of zinc finger-encoding regions; nonoverlapping cDNA clones were chosen on the basis of sequences and genomic hybridization pattern. Zinc finger structure-encoding clones, which were designated by the term "Kox" and a number from 1 to 32 and which were apparently unique (i.e., distinct from each other and distinct from those isolated by other laboratories), were chosen for mapping in the human genome. DNAs from rodent-human somatic cell hybrids retaining defined complements of human chromosomes were analyzed for the presence of each of the Kox genes. Correlation between the presence of specific human chromosome regions and specific Kox genes established the chromosomal locations. Multiple Kox loci were mapped to 7q (Kox 18 and 25 and a locus detected by both Kox 8 cDNA and Kox 27 cDNA), 8q24 5' to the myc locus (Kox 9 and 32), 10cen----q24 (Kox 2, 15, 19, 21, 30, and 31), 12q13-qter (Kox 1 and 20), 17p13 (Kox 11 and 26), and 19q (Kox 5, 6, 10, 22, 24, and 28). Single Kox loci were mapped to 7p22 (Kox 3), 18q12 (Kox 17), 19p (Kox 13), 22q11 between IG lambda and BCR-1 (locus detected by both Kox 8 cDNA and Kox 27 cDNA), and Xp (Kox 14). Several of the Kox loci map to regions in which other zinc finger structure-encoding loci have already been localized, indicating possible zinc finger gene clusters. In addition, Kox genes at 8q24, 17p13, and 22q11--and perhaps other Kox genes--are located near recurrent chromosomal translocation breakpoints. Others, such as those on 7p and 7q, may be near regions specifically active in T cells.  相似文献   

5.
We have constructed a high-resolution cytogenetic map with 168 DNA markers, including 90 RFLP markers for human chromosome 11. The cosmid clones were mapped by fluorescence in situ suppression hybridization, in which discrete fluorescent signals can be detected directly on prometaphase R-banded chromosomes. Although these cosmid clones were distributed throughout the chromosome, they had some tendency to localize in the regions of R-positive band, such as 11p15, 11p11.2, 11q13, 11q23, and 11q25. Since these regions of chromosome 11 are considered to contain genes responsible for certain genetic diseases, cancer breakpoints involved in chromosome rearrangements, and tumor-suppressor genes, this high-resolution cytogenetic map will contribute to the molecular characterization of such genes. This map will also provide many landmarks essential for construction of the complete physical map with contigs of cosmid and YAC clones.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Two members of the human zinc finger Krüppel family, ZNF 12 (KOX 3) and ZNF 26 (KOX 20), have been localized by somatic cell hybrid analysis and in situ chromosomal hybridization. The presence of individual human zinc finger genes in mouse-human hybrid DNAs was correlated with the presence of specific human chromosomes or regions of chromosomes in the corresponding cell hybrids. Analysis of such mouse-human hybrid DNAs allowed the assignment of the ZNF 12 (KOX 3) gene to chromosome region 7p. The ZNF 26 (KOX 20) gene segregated with chromosome region 12q13-qter. The zinc finger genes ZNF 12 (KOX 3) and ZNF 26 (KOX 20) were localized by in situ chromosomal hybridization to human chromosome regions 7p22-21 and 12q24.33, respectively. These genes and the previously mapped ZNF 24 (KOX 17) and ZNF 29 (KOX 26) genes, are found near fragile sites.  相似文献   

7.
Eukaryotic porins or VDACs (Voltage-Dependent Anion-selective Channels) are integral membrane proteins forming large hydrophilic pores. Three functioning genes for VDAC isoforms have been detected in mouse and the corresponding cDNAs are known also in humans. Tissue-specific VDAC isoform 1 (HVDAC1) deficiency in human skeletal muscle is responsible of a rare mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, fatal in childhood. Since coding sequences are not affected in the patient, we focused our interest in the gene structure. HVDAC1 and 2 have been previously mapped at chromosomes Xq13-21 and 21, respectively. Screening of an human chromosome X cosmid library resulted only in the isolation of processed pseudogenes, finely mapped at Xq22 and Xp11.2. Here, we report the mapping of HVDAC1 to chromosome 5q31 and HVDAC2 to chromosome 10q22 by FISH. Exon/intron probes, designed on the basis of the mouse gene structures, were obtained by long extension PCR amplification using the whole genomic DNA as a template. The sequence of the probe extremities clearly pointed to a genuine VDAC genomic sequence. Human and mouse regions where VDAC 1 and 2 genes were mapped are known to be synthetic, thus reinforcing the mapping of the human homologues.  相似文献   

8.
A number of human telomeres have been successfully cloned using a modified yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) vector (half-YAC) cloning strategy, but to date, human chromosome 22q has not been identified by this approach. We used an alternative approach of genomic walking, starting from a subtelomeric sequence, TelBam3.4, present on a number of human chromosomes including 22q. This approach was successful in the development of a cosmid contig representing the terminal 140 kb of human chromosome 22q, providing telomeric closure of the genetic and physical maps for 22q. The most distal region of the contig contains subtelomeric repeats which crosshybridize to a number of chromosomes, while the proximal sequences are unique for 22q. The unique sequence cosmid was used as a 22qter-specific probe for fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis, which confirmed that this cosmid was distal to the most telomeric marker previously available for chromosome 22. In addition, this cosmid was used to document a 22q terminal deletion that was not detectable by conventional cytogenetic analysis. Unique telomere-specific FISH probes such as this one will have significant diagnostic value in the detection of cryptic deletions and translocations in patients with unexplained mental retardation and other patient populations. Received: 21 November 1995  相似文献   

9.
Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) was employed in mapping the alpha-satellite DNA that was revealed in the cosmid libraries specific for human chromosomes 13, 21, and 22. In total, 131 clones were revealed. They contained various elements of centromeric alphoid DNA sequences of acrocentric chromosomes, including those located close to SINEs, LINEs, and classical satellite sequences. The heterochromatin of acrocentric chromosomes was shown to contain two different groups of alphoid sequences: (1) those immediately adjacent to the centromeric regions (alpha 13-1, alpha 21-1, and alpha 22-1 loci) and (2) those located in the short arm of acrocentric chromosomes (alpha 13-2, alpha 21-2, and alpha 22-2 loci). Alphoid DNA sequences from the alpha 13-2, alpha 21-2, and alpha 22-2 loci are apparently not involved in the formation of centromeres and are absent from mitotically stable marker chromosomes with a deleted short arm. Robertsonian translocations t(13q; 21q) and t(14q; 22q), and chromosome 21p-. The heterochromatic regions of chromosomes 13, 21, and 22 were also shown to contain relatively chromosome-specific repetitive sequences of various alphoid DNA families, whose numerous copies occur in other chromosomes. Pools of centromeric alphoid cosmids can be of use in further studies of the structural and functional properties of heterochromatic DNA and the identification of centromeric sequences. Moreover, these clones can be employed in high-resolution mapping and in sequencing the heterochromatic regions of the human genome. The detailed FISH analysis of numerous alphoid cosmid clones allowed the identification of several new, highly specific DNA probes of molecular cytogenetic studies--in particular, the interphase and metaphase analyses of chromosomes 2, 9, 11, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 21-13, 22-14, and X.  相似文献   

10.
A method is described for the isolation of chromosome region specific cosmids. The 5q35 region of the long arm of human chromosome 5 was microdissected, digested with MboI, ligated to oligonucleotide adaptors, amplified by the polymerase chain reaction and cloned into a plasmid vector. Inserts which did not contain highly repetitive sequences were used to screen a chromosome 5 cosmid library by direct hybridization. There were 33 positive cosmid clones identified with 4 microclones. Individual cosmid clones were biotinylated and used as probes for fluorescence in situ hybridization to metaphase chromosomes. Of the 33 cosmids that were mapped, 29 localized to q35 and 4 to q34, demonstrating the specificity of the microdissection library and the cosmids.  相似文献   

11.
Y S Fan  R Sasi  C Lee  D Court  C C Lin 《Genomics》1992,14(2):542-545
Fifty cosmids have been mapped to metaphase chromosomes by fluorescence in situ hybridization under conditions that suppress signals from repetitive DNA sequences. The cosmid clones were isolated from a flow-sorted human X chromosome library. Thirty-eight of the clones were localized to chromosome X and 12 to autosomes such as chromosomes 3, 7, 8, 14, and 17. Although most of the cosmids mapped to the X chromosome appeared to be scattered along both the short and long arms, 10 cosmids were localized to the centromeric region of the chromosome. Southern blot analysis revealed that only two of these clones hybridized to probe pXBR-1, which detects the DXZ1 locus. In addition, 4 out of 5 cosmids mapped on chromosome 8 also localized on the centromeric region. While localization of X-specific cosmids will facilitate the physical mapping of the human X chromosome, cosmids mapped to the centromeric regions of chromosomes X and 8 should be especially useful for studying the structure and organization of these regions.  相似文献   

12.
A human neuroreceptor clone (G21), which was isolated by cross-hybridization with the human clone for the beta 2-adrenergic receptor, has recently been shown to encode the gene for the 5HT1A receptor (HTR1A) subtype. In situ hybridization to human metaphase chromosomes mapped the G21 sequence to chromosome 5 at bands 5q11.2-q13. The clone G21 recognizes a SacI RFLP with low heterozygosity (0.13). To increase the informativeness of the HTR1A locus we have isolated two new cosmid clones containing the receptor gene. No polymorphic microsatellites were present in the cosmids. However, one cosmid revealed a new TaqI RFLP that showed tight linkage to new highly polymorphic microsatellites for the loci D5S76, D5S39, and D5S6 in seven British and Icelandic reference pedigrees (maximum LOD of 13.2 with D5S76).  相似文献   

13.
K Ozawa  Y Murakami  T Eki  E Soeda  K Yokoyama 《Genomics》1992,12(2):214-220
The HSP90 family of heat-shock proteins (encoded by genes for HSP90 alpha and beta) constitutes one of the major groups of proteins that are synthesized at increased rates in response to heat and other forms of stress. We previously isolated two distinct cDNA clones for HSP90 alpha from human peripheral blood lymphocytes and from HeLa cells transfected with the adenovirus E1A gene, respectively. To determine the organization of this complex multigene family in the human genome, we used three complementary approaches: Southern analysis of a panel of human/hamster somatic cell hybrids, molecular cloning of the cosmid HSP90 alpha clones from libraries prepared with DNAs from human lymphoblastoid cells, and in situ hybridization to human chromosomes. We demonstrate here that nucleotide sequences that encode HSP90 alpha map to human chromosomes 1q21.2-q22, 4q35, 11p14.1-p14.2, and 14q32.3. The chromosomal mapping of the loci, HSPCAL1, HSPCAL2, HSPCAL3, HSPCAL4, and the characterization of the respective genes should facilitate clarification of the organization of this gene family and lead to a better understanding of the biological functions of the gene product.  相似文献   

14.
Proteins that share conserved "zinc finger" motifs represent a class of DNA-binding proteins that have been shown to play a fundamental role in regulating gene expression and to be involved in a number of human hereditary and malignant disease states. We have isolated, characterized, and mapped zinc finger-encoding genes specific to human chromosome 11q to investigate their possible association in the molecular pathogenesis of several disease loci mapped to this chromosome. An arrayed chromosome 11q cosmid library was screened using a degenerate oligonucleotide corresponding to the H/C link consensus sequence of the Drosophila Kruppel zinc finger gene, resulting in the isolation of six putative zinc finger genes. Three of the genes (ZNF123, ZNF125, and ZNF126) were analyzed and shown to contain tandemly repeated zinc finger motifs of the C2-H2 class. All three novel genes were found to be expressed in normal adult human tissues, although the tissue-specific pattern of expression differs markedly. Isolated zinc finger genes were regionally mapped on chromosome 11 using fluorescence in situ suppression hybridization and demonstrated clustering of the genes at 11q13.3-11q13.4 and 11q23.1-11q23.2. Analysis of in situ hybridization to interphase nuclei demonstrated a maximum distance of 1 Mb separating distinct finger genes. This analysis defines two linked multigene families of zinc finger genes to chromosome bands associated with a high frequency of specific translocations associated with malignancies.  相似文献   

15.
Two members of the zinc finger Krüppel family, ZNF24 (KOX17) and ZNF29 (KOX26), have been localized by somatic cell hybrid analysis and in situ chromosomal hybridization to human chromosomes 18q12 and 17p13-p12, respectively. The mapping of ZNF29 together with the previously reported localization of ZFP3 suggests that a zinc finger gene complex is located on human chromosome 17p. ZNF29 maps centromeric to the human p53 tumor antigen gene (TP53). In the analogous murine position, the two mouse zinc finger genes Zfp2 and Zfp3 have recently been assigned to the distal region of mouse chromosome 11, the murine homolog of human chromosome 17. Both human zinc finger genes ZNF24 and ZNF29 are in chromosomal regions that have been noted to be deleted in neoplasms of the lung and of the central nervous system at chromosome 17p and in colorectal neoplasia at chromosomes 17p and 18q.  相似文献   

16.
Molecular probes that contain DNA flanking CpG-rich restriction sites are extremely valuable in the construction of physical maps of chromosomes and in the identification of genes associated with hypomethylated HTF (HpaII tiny fragment) islands. We describe a new approach to the isolation and characterization of linking clones in arrayed chromosome-specific cosmid libraries through the large-scale semiautomated restriction mapping of cosmid clones. We utilized a cosmid library representing human chromosome 11q12-11qter and carried out automated restriction enzyme analysis, followed by regional localization to chromosome 11q using high-resolution in situ suppression hybridization. Using this approach, 165 cosmid linking clones containing one or more NotI, BssHII, SfiI, or SacII sites were identified among 960 chromosome-specific cosmids. Furthermore, this analysis allowed clones containing a single site to be distinguished from those containing clusters of two or more rare sites. This analysis demonstrated that more than 75% of cosmids containing a rare restriction site also contained a second rare restriction site, suggesting a high degree of CpG-rich restriction site clustering. Thirty chromosome 11q-specific cosmids containing rare CpG-rich restriction sites were regionally localized by high-resolution fluorescence in situ suppression hybridization, demonstrating that all of the CpG-rich sites detected by this method were located in bands 11q13 and 11q23. In addition, the distribution of (CA)n repetitive sequences was determined by hybridization of the arrayed cosmid library with oligonucleotide probes, confirming a random distribution of microsatellites among CpG-rich cosmid clones. This set of reagent cosmid clones will be useful for physical linking of large restriction fragments detected by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and will provide a new and highly efficient approach to the construction of a physical map of human chromosome 11q.  相似文献   

17.
We have extended our mapping effort on human chromosome 11 to encompass a total of 262 DNA markers, which have been mapped into 24 intervals on chromosome 11; 123 of the markers reveal RFLPs. These clones are scattered throughout the chromosome, although some clustering occurs in R-positive bands (p15.1, p11.2, q13, and q23.3). Fifty-two of the markers were found to contain DNA sequences conserved in Chinese hamster, and some of these 52 also cross-hybridized with DNA from other mammals and/or chicken. As the length of chromosome 11 is estimated at nearly 130 cM, the average distance between RFLP markers is roughly 1 cM. The large panel of DNA markers on our map should contribute to investigations of hereditary diseases on this chromosome, and it will also provide reagents for constructing either fine-scale linkage and physical maps or contig maps of cosmids or yeast artificial chromosomes.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Nine KOX zinc finger genes were localized on four human chromosomes by in situ hybridization of cDNA probes to metaphase chromosomes. KOX1 (ZNF10), KOX11 (ZNF18), and KOX12 (ZNF19) were mapped to chromosome bands 12q24.33, 17p13-p12, and 16q22-q23, respectively. Six other KOX genes were localized on chromosome 19: KOX6 (ZNF14) and KOX13 (ZNF20) to 19p13.3-p13.2, KOX5 (ZNF13) and KOX22 (ZNF27) to 19q13.2-qter, and KOX24 (ZNF28) and KOX28 (ZNF30) to 19q13.4. Pulsed field gel electrophoresis experiments showed that the pairs of KOX genes found on the chromosome bands 12q24.33, 16q22-q23, 19p13.3-p13.2, or 19q13.3-qter lie within 200–300 kb DNA fragments. This suggests the existence of KOX gene clusters on these chromosomal bands.  相似文献   

20.
Two members of the KOX gene family, ZNF23 (KOX16) and ZNF32 (KOX30), have been mapped by in situ hybridization to chromosome regions 16q22 and 10q23-q24, respectively. The map location of ZNF23 and ZNF32 placed these zinc finger protein genes near to chromosome loci that, under certain in vitro conditions, are expressed as fragile sites (FRA16B, FRA16C) and (FRA10D, FRA10A, FRA10B and FRA10E). Human zinc finger gene ZNF32 maps to a chromosome region on 10q23-24 in which deletions have been observed associated with malignant lymphoma on 10q22-23 and with carcinoma of the prostate on 10q24. ZNF23 is located on 16q22 in a chromosomal region that has been involved in chromosome alterations characteristic of acute myeloid leukemia. A second Kox zinc finger gene (ZNF19/KOX12) was recently mapped to the same chromosome region on human chromosome 16q22. In the analogous murine position, the murine zinc finger genes Zfp-1 and Zfp-4 are found in the syntenic 16q region of mouse chromosome 8. Thus, ZNF19 and ZNF23 might be members of an evolutionarily conserved zinc finger gene cluster located on human chromosome 16q22.  相似文献   

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