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1.
DNA polymerase alpha and primase are two key enzymatic components of the eukaryotic DNA replication complex. In situ hybridization of cloned cDNAs for mouse DNA polymerase alpha and for the two subunits of mouse primase has been utilized to physically map these genes in the mouse genome. The DNA polymerase alpha gene (Pola) was mapped to the mouse X chromosome in region C-D. The gene encoding the p58 subunit of primase (Prim2) was located to mouse chromosome 1 in region A5-B and the p49 subunit gene (Prim1) was found to be on mouse chromosome 10 in the distal part of band D that is close to the telomere. Current knowledge of mouse and human conserved chromosomal regions along with the findings presented here lead to predictions of where the genes for the DNA primase subunits may be found in the human genome: the p58 subunit gene may be on human chromosome 2 and the p49 subunit gene on human chromosome 12. The mapping of Pola to region C-D of the mouse X chromosome adds a new marker in a conserved region between the mouse X chromosome and region Xp21-22.1 of the human X chromosome.  相似文献   

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A mouse cDNA probe homologous to the human MCF2 transforming sequence has been identified and partially cloned, and is used here to localize the gene on the mouse X chromosome. The human gene has been physically mapped to within 60 kb of the gene for coagulation factor IX, within a large conserved linkage group between the mouse and human genomes which extends from HPRT to G6PD on the X chromosomes of both mammalian species. In situ hybridization of the mouse Mcf-2 probe onto mouse metaphase chromosomes indicates that this gene lies in the same region of the X chromosome as Cf-9, the mouse gene for coagulation factor IX. Moreover, segregation of species-specific genomic DNA polymorphisms for Mcf-2 and Cf-9 in a total of 203 individuals derived from two large interspecific mouse backcross populations (which are also segregating for 17 other X-linked molecular markers) demonstrates that the mouse genes are separated by only 0.5 +/- 0.5 cM. Despite this short distance we were able to order Mcf-2 and Cf-9 relative to one another and other genes in this region. The mouse gene order Hprt-Cf-9-Mcf-2-G6pd predicts a similar ordering of genes on the human X chromosome, a gene order which has only recently been demonstrated by physical mapping. Thus, the map location and linkage relationships of the Mcf-2 gene are similar in man and mouse, and this unique protooncogenic locus is part of a conserved linkage group on the mammalian X chromosome.  相似文献   

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Inactivation of the Rps4 gene on the mouse X chromosome.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
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The chromosomal locations of the human and murine T11 (CD2) gene have been determined. Using recently cloned cDNA to probe Southern blots of mouse X human and Chinese hamster X mouse somatic cell hybrids, we have localized the human T11 gene to chromosome 1 and the murine T11 gene to chromosome 3. Based on previously determined blocks of homology between human chromosome 1 and mouse chromosome 3, it is suggested that the human T11 gene may lie on the short arm of chromosome 1 proximal to p221. Thus, the T11 gene is not linked to any other genes for T cell markers that have been mapped to date.  相似文献   

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Type X collagen, a homotrimer of alpha 1 (X) polypeptide chains, is specifically expressed by hypertrophic chondrocytes in regions of cartilage undergoing endochondral ossification. We have previously described the isolation of a small fragment of the human type X collagen gene (COL10A1) and its localization to the q21-q22 region of human chromosome 6 [Apte, S., Mattei, M.-G. & Olsen, B. R. (1991) FEBS Lett. 282, 393-396]. Using this fragment as a probe to screen genomic libraries, we report here the isolation of human and mouse genomic clones which contain the major part of the human and mouse type X collagen genes. In both species, the 14-kb genomic clones which were isolated contain a long open reading frame (greater than 2000 bp in length) which codes for the entire C-terminal non-collagenous (NC1) domain, the entire collagenous (COL) domain and part of the N-terminal non-collagenous (NC2) domain of the alpha 1(X) collagen chain. The human genomic clone contains the major part of the COL10A1 gene, in addition to the region we have previously cloned, and is highly similar to the corresponding portions of the mouse genomic clone (84.5% similarity at the nucleotide level, and 86.1% at the level of the conceptual translation product). The identification of the mouse genomic clone as the alpha 1(X) collagen gene (Col10a1) was confirmed by in situ hybridization of a fragment of the mouse genomic clone to sections from newborn mice. Hybridization was restricted to the hypertrophic chondrocytes of developing chondroepiphyses, being absent in small chondrocytes and in other tissues. Using interspecific backcross analysis, the locus for the mouse alpha 1 (X) collagen gene was assigned to chromosome 10. The cloning and chromosomal mapping of the human and mouse alpha 1 (X) collagen genes now permit the investigation of the possible role of type X collagen gene defects in the genesis of chondrodysplasias in both species and provide data essential for the generation of transgenic mice deficient in type X collagen.  相似文献   

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M Filippi  C Tribioli  D Toniolo 《Genomics》1990,7(3):453-457
Lambda G28, a mouse genomic clone homologous to the human P3 gene and associated with a CpG island, also hybridizes to human probes for the neighboring GdX gene. The two genes, P3 and GdX (DXS253E and DXS254E), physically linked on the human X chromosome, lie within a similar physical distance on the mouse X chromosome. The CpG island corresponds to that at the 5' of the human GdX gene. The relative orientation of the two genes is the same. The DNA sequence in coding and noncoding regions is very conserved.  相似文献   

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By hybridizing a tritiated human genomic probe (pGD3) to metaphase chromosomes in situ, we have localized the gene for glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) in both the human and mouse complement. The locus on the intact human X chromosome is close to the telomere on the long arm, confirming the assignment based on studies of an X/autosome translocation in human-mouse hybrids. Although the signal:background ratio was reduced for the heterologous hybridization of the human probe to mouse metaphases, 20% of the grains were on the X chromosome and 93% of these were in the A region, relatively close to the centromere. The location of G6PD in mouse and man reflects intrachromosomal transposition of these homologous X loci. Genomic DNAs from mouse and man and from hybrids with human X/autosome translocations were digested with several restriction enzymes including EcoRI, PstI, and HpaII, and Southern blots were probed with 32P-pGD3. The results of the analysis also confirm the human G6PD assignment and are consistent with a single copy of the locus in the haploid genome of both species.  相似文献   

14.
Evidence is presented for the assignment of the gene for adenosine kinase to Mus musculus chromosome 14 by synteny testing and karyotypic analysis of mouse X Chinese hamster somatic cell hybrid clones. ADOK and two enzymes previously mapped to mouse chromosome 14, NP and ES-10, were expressed concordantly in 29 hybrid clones. Chromosome analysis confirmed this assignment. Syntenic evidence is also presented using several clones of a gene transfer system in which the gene for human HPRT had integrated into modified mouse chromosome 14's.  相似文献   

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Recent chromosome walking experiments have identified a candidate gene (ZFY) for the testis-determining factor on the human Y chromosome (Page et al., 1987). We report here the regional assignments of the ZFY gene and related sequences in the human and the mouse. By in situ hybridization, we assigned ZFX and ZFY to human chromosome bands Xp21 and Yp11.3, respectively. Although the mouse harbors two Zfy genes, only one site at band A1 of its Y chromosome was significantly labeled. The mouse Zfx gene and the Zfa gene on chromosome 10 were assigned to bands XD and 10B5, respectively. These assignments of the ZFX gene in human and mouse add another marker to the conserved syntenic group for evaluating the evolutionary relationship of the human and mouse X chromosomes.  相似文献   

18.
Is ZFY the sex-determining gene on the human Y chromosome?   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The sex-determining region of the human Y chromosome contains a gene, ZFY, that encodes a zinc-finger protein. ZFY may prove to be the testis-determining factor. There is a closely related gene, ZFX, on the human X chromosome. In most species of placental mammals, we detect two ZFY-related loci: one on the Y chromosome and one on the X chromosome. However, there are four ZFY-homologous loci in mouse: Zfy-1 and Zfy-2 map to the sex-determining region of the mouse Y chromosome, Zfx is on the mouse X chromosome, and a fourth locus is autosomal.  相似文献   

19.
Human cDNA probes encoding the C3b/C4b complement receptor, CR1, have been used to identify, in the mouse, two new genes which are related to CR1 but which appear to encode a different protein product. These new mouse genes, arbitrarily designated mouse genes X and Y, hybridize specifically to three different cDNA probes derived from human CR1. The degree of hybridization homology between the mouse X and Y genes suggests they are very closely related to one another; however, the chromosomal localization of the mouse X gene to chromosome 8 and the mouse Y gene to chromosome 1 indicates they are distinct gene sequences. The mRNA species detected with the X and/or Y (X/Y) sequences are approximately 2000 bases in length, but vary in both quantity and size depending upon the tissue analyzed. DNA sequence analysis of a cDNA specific for the X and Y sequences indicates the mature protein(s) will contain the 60 amino acid consensus repeat characteristic of a group of other proteins including CR1, the C3d receptor (CR2), H, C4 binding protein (C4bp), the interleukin 2 (Il 2) receptor and others. The identity of the mouse X and Y genes, and the function of the proteins which they encode, is not known; however, the small size of the mRNA and the tissue specific expression suggests they do not encode mouse CR1 or CR2 but instead encode a related protein (or proteins) which is expressed in a wide variety of mouse tissues.  相似文献   

20.
The structural gene for human acid beta-glucosidase (GBA) has been assigned to chromosome 1 using somatic cell hybridization techniques for gene mapping. The human enzyme was detected in mouse RAG cell-human fibroblast cell hybrids by a sensitive double antibody immunoprecipitation assay using a mouse antihuman GBA antibody. No cross-reactivity between mouse beta-glucosidase and human GBA or neutral beta-glucosidase (GBN) was observed. Fifty-two primary, secondary, and tertiary manmouse hybrid lines, derived from three separate fusion experiments, were analyzed for human GBA and enzyme markers for the human chromosomes. Without exception, the presence of human GBA in these hybrid clones was correlated with the presence of human chromosome 1 or its enzymatic markers, phosphoglucomutase 1 (PGM1), and fumarate hydratase (FH). All other human chromosomes were eliminated by the independent segregation of GBA and their respective enzyme markers and/or chromosomes. Using a RAG X human fibroblast line with a mouse-human rearrangement of human chromosome 1, the locus for GBA was limited to the region 1p11 to 1qter.  相似文献   

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