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1.
We report here on 3 familial whole-arm translocations (WATs), namely the 8th instance of t(1;19)(p10;q10) and 2 novel exchanges: t(9;13)(p10;q10) and t(12;21)(p10;q10). The exchanges (1;19) and (12;21) were ascertained through a balanced carrier, whereas the t(9;13) was first diagnosed in a boy with a trisomy 9p syndrome and der(9p13p). Results of FISH analyses with the appropriate α-satellite probes were as follows. Family 1, t(1;19): the D1Z5 probe gave a strong signal on both the normal chromosome 1 and the der(1q19p) as well as a weak signal on the der(1p19q). Family 2, t(9;13): the centromere-9 alphoid and D13Z1/D21Z1 probes under standard stringency gave no signal on the der(9p13p) in both the proband and a carrier brother, whereas the der(9q13q) was labelled only with the centromere-9 alphoid repeat in the latter; yet, this probe under low stringency revealed a residual amount of alphoid DNA on the der(9p13p) in the carrier. Family 3, t(12;21): the D12Z3 probe gave a signal on the normal chromosome 12 and the der(12p21q), whereas the D13Z1/D21Z1 repeat labelled the der(12q21p), the normal chromosome 21, and both chromosomes 13. Out of 101 WATs compiled here, 73 are distinct exchanges, including 32 instances between chromosomes with common alphoid repeats. Moreover, 7/9 of recurrent WATs involved chromosomes from the same alphoid family. Thus constitutional WATs appear to recur more frequently than other reciprocal exchanges, often involve chromosomes with common alphoid repeats, and can mostly be accounted for the great homology in alphoid DNA that favours mispairing and illegitimate nonhomologous recombination.  相似文献   

2.
We have cloned and characterized two distinct types of alphoid DNA elements. Probe pG-Xba 11/340 was obtained by random cloning of human satellite DNA and contains two basic units with overall 88% homology to the 171-bp consensus alphoid sequence. pG-Xba 11/340-like elements are represented about 2,000-4,000 times in the haploid genome and, by in situ hybridization, are found exclusively at the primary constrictions of chromosomes 4 and 9. Probe pG-A16 was cloned from a chromosome 19-specific cosmid library and represents a 2.25-kb higher-order DNA element which is present at roughly 75-150 copies per haploid genome and which hybridizes to the centromeres of chromosomes 5 and 19. Using the pG-A16 probe, further genetic and physical dissection of the central area of chromosome 19 can be envisaged.  相似文献   

3.
We have isolated a DNA clone (pMR9A) that identifies an alphoid DNA subset specific for chromosome 9. This alphoid subset is characterized by a dimeric organization as revealed by Southern blot analysis after digestion with HaeIII, HinfI, or StuI. Nonradioactive in situ hybridization demonstrated that pMR9A hybridizes only to the centromeric region of chromosome 9 and reveals chromosome 9 aneuploidies in interphase nuclei. In addition, the probe detects quantitative differences in alpha satellite DNA on chromosome 9, but these quantitative differences are not correlated with the size of the heterochromatic region. Double-labeling experiments, using a chromosome 9-specific satellite 3 clone and pMR9A, enabled us spatially to distinguish the alphoid and satellite 3 domains on metaphase chromosomes after treatment of the cultures with 5-azacytidine.  相似文献   

4.
Summary We have analysed the TaqI patterns obtained with an alphoid DNA probe specific for human chromosomes 13 and 21 in a number of unrelated individuals, as well as in the somatic hybrid WA 17 which carries chromosome 21 as a unique human chromosome. In certain individuals, two types of extra bands are superimposed over the relatively simple basic banding pattern exhibited by all individuals. Thus, three independent allele-specific DNA patterns are defined. The basic and normal organization of the alpha satellite in chromosome 21 consists of tandemly arranged arrays of repeats representing 11 times the 171-bp monomer of the alphoid DNA sequences. The supernumerary bands found in some individuals are organized in tandemly arranged subsets of repeats representing 18 times and 9.5 times the 171bp basic monomer, respectively. These less fragment alleles segregate in a Mendelian fashion. Linkage analyses suggest that they originate from chromosomes 13 and 21, respectively.  相似文献   

5.
The centromeric regions of all human chromosomes are characterized by distinct subsets of a diverse tandemly repeated DNA family, alpha satellite. On human chromosome 17, the predominant form of alpha satellite is a 2.7-kilobase-pair higher-order repeat unit consisting of 16 alphoid monomers. We present the complete nucleotide sequence of the 16-monomer repeat, which is present in 500 to 1,000 copies per chromosome 17, as well as that of a less abundant 15-monomer repeat, also from chromosome 17. These repeat units were approximately 98% identical in sequence, differing by the exclusion of precisely 1 monomer from the 15-monomer repeat. Homologous unequal crossing-over is suggested as a probable mechanism by which the different repeat lengths on chromosome 17 were generated, and the putative site of such a recombination event is identified. The monomer organization of the chromosome 17 higher-order repeat unit is based, in part, on tandemly repeated pentamers. A similar pentameric suborganization has been previously demonstrated for alpha satellite of the human X chromosome. Despite the organizational similarities, substantial sequence divergence distinguishes these subsets. Hybridization experiments indicate that the chromosome 17 and X subsets are more similar to each other than to the subsets found on several other human chromosomes. We suggest that the chromosome 17 and X alpha satellite subsets may be related components of a larger alphoid subfamily which have evolved from a common ancestral repeat into the contemporary chromosome-specific subsets.  相似文献   

6.
Evolution of alpha-satellite DNA on human acrocentric chromosomes   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
K H Choo  B Vissel  E Earle 《Genomics》1989,5(2):332-344
In situ hybridization of five new and one previously described alpha-satellite sequences isolated from chromosome 21 libraries gave the following chromosomal distribution patterns: (a) two sequences (pTRA-1 and -4) hybridizing to chromosomes 13, 14, 15, 21, and 22 (also 19 and 20); (b) one sequence (pTRA-7) hybridizing to chromosome 14; and (c) three sequences (pTRA-2, -11 and -15) hybridizing to chromosomes 13, 14, and 21, with significant but weaker signals on 15 and 22. These results suggested the sharing of alphoid domains between different acrocentric chromosomes and the coexistence of multiple domains on each chromosome. Analysis of somatic cell hybrids carrying a single human acrocentric chromosome using pTRA-2 demonstrated a higher-order repeating structure common to chromosomes 13, 14, and 21, but not to 15 and 22, providing direct evidence for sequence homogenization in this domain among the former three chromosomes. We present a model of evolution and genetic exchange of alpha sequences on the acrocentric chromosomes which can satisfactorily explain these and previous observations of (a) two different alphoid subfamilies, one common to chromosomes 13 and 21 and the other common to chromosomes 14 and 22, (b) a different alphoid subfamily on chromosome 22, and (c) nonrandom participation of chromosomes 13 and 14, and 14 and 21 in Robertsonian translocations.  相似文献   

7.
8.
A degenerate alpha satellite DNA probe specific for a repeated sequence on human chromosomes 13 and 21 was synthesized using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with this probe to normal metaphase spreads revealed strong probe binding to the centromeric regions of human chromosomes 13 and 21 with negligible cross-hybridization with other chromosomes. FISH to normal interphase cell nuclei showed four distinct domains of probe binding. However, hybridization with probe to interphase and metaphase preparations from one apparently normal human male resulted in only three major binding domains. Metaphase chromosome analysis revealed a centromeric deletion on one chromosome 21 that caused greatly reduced probe binding. The result suggest caution in the interpretation of interphase ploidy studies performed with chromosome-specific alphoid DNA probes.  相似文献   

9.
We have isolated and characterized two human middle repetitive alphoid DNA fragments, L1.26 and L1.84, which localize to two different sets of chromosomes. In situ hybridization revealed both repeats to have major and minor binding sites on the pericentric regions of several chromosomes. Probe L1.26 maps predominantly to chromosomes 13 and 21. Probe L1.84 locates to chromosome 18. Minor hybridization sites for both probes include chromosomes 2, 8, 9, and 20; in addition, L1.26 revealed minor sites on chromosomes 18 and 22. The binding to these sites strongly depends on hybridization conditions. In Southern blot hybridizations to total human DNA, both L1.26 and L1.84 give the same ladder pattern, with a step size of 170 bp, indicating their presence as tandem repeats, but with different band intensities for each probe. The chromosome-specific nature of particular multimers was confirmed by Southern blot analyses of a human-rodent hybrid cell panel. We conclude that L1.26 and L1.84, with their related sequences, constitute subfamilies of alphoid DNA that are specific for subsets of chromosomes and, in some cases, possibly even for single chromosomes.  相似文献   

10.
Human centromeres remain poorly characterized regions of the human genome despite their importance for the maintenance of chromosomes. In part this is due to the difficulty of cloning of highly repetitive DNA fragments and distinguishing chromosome-specific clones in a genomic library. In this work we report the highly selective isolation of human centromeric DNA using transformation-associated recombination (TAR) cloning. A TAR vector with alphoid DNA monomers as targeting sequences was used to isolate large centromeric regions of human chromosomes 2, 5, 8, 11, 15, 19, 21 and 22 from human cells as well as monochromosomal hybrid cells. The alphoid DNA array was also isolated from the 12 Mb human mini-chromosome ΔYq74 that contained the minimum amount of alphoid DNA required for proper chromosome segregation. Preliminary results of the structural analyses of different centromeres are reported in this paper. The ability of the cloned human centromeric regions to support human artificial chromosome (HAC) formation was assessed by transfection into human HT1080 cells. Centromeric clones from ΔYq74 did not support the formation of HACs, indicating that the requirements for the existence of a functional centromere on an endogenous chromosome and those for forming a de novo centromere may be distinct. A construct with an alphoid DNA array from chromosome 22 with no detectable CENP-B motifs formed mitotically stable HACs in the absence of drug selection without detectable acquisition of host DNAs. In summary, our results demonstrated that TAR cloning is a useful tool for investigating human centromere organization and the structural requirements for formation of HAC vectors that might have a potential for therapeutic applications.  相似文献   

11.
We have cloned an alphoid DNA fragment, pBS4D, from the DNA of a human-hamster hybrid cell line containing chromosome 2 as its only cytologically detectable human component. Under high stringency conditions, pBS4D hybridized in situ mostly to chromosome 2 and to a lesser extent to chromosomes 18 and 20. Restriction analysis using the DNA from selected somatic hybrid cell lines revealed that the genomic organization of this alphoid DNA differs on each of these three chromosomes.  相似文献   

12.
We have isolated and characterized a human genomic DNA clone (PZ20, locus D20Z2) that identifies, under high-stringency hybridization conditions, an alphoid DNA subset specific for chromosome 20. The specificity was determined using fluorescence in situ hybridization. Sequence analysis confirmed our previously reported data on the great similarity between the chromosome 20 and chromosome 2 alphoid subsets. Comparative mapping of pZ20 on chimpanzee and gorilla chromosomes, also performed under high-stringency conditions, indicates that the alphoid subset has ancestral sequences on chimpanzee chromosome 11 and gorilla chromosome 19. However, no hybridization was observed to chromosomes 21 in the great apes, the homolog of human chromosome 20.  相似文献   

13.
The human alpha satellite DNA family is composed of diverse, tandemly reiterated monomer units of approximately 171 basepairs localized to the centromeric region of each chromosome. These sequences are organized in a highly chromosome-specific manner with many, if not all human chromosomes being characterized by individually distinct alphoid subsets. Here, we compare the nucleotide sequences of 153 monomer units, representing alphoid components of at least 12 different human chromosomes. Based on the analysis of sequence variation at each position within the 171 basepair monomer, we have derived a consensus sequence for the monomer unit of human alpha satellite DNA which we suggest may reflect the monomer sequence from which different chromosomal subsets have evolved. Sequence heterogeneity is evident at each position within the consensus monomer unit and there are no positions of strict nucleotide sequence conservation, although some regions are more variable than others. A substantial proportion of the overall sequence variation may be accounted for by nucleotide changes which are characteristic of monomer components of individual chromosomal subsets or groups of subsets which have a common evolutionary history.  相似文献   

14.
We have investigated the organization and complexity of alpha satellite DNA on chromosomes 10 and 12 by restriction endonuclease mapping, in situ hybridization (ISH), and DNA-sequencing methods. Alpha satellite DNA on both chromosomes displays a basic dimeric organization, revealed as a 6- and an 8-mer higher-order repeat (HOR) unit on chromosome 10 and as an 8-mer HOR on chromosome 12. While these HORs show complete chromosome specificity under high-stringency ISH conditions, they recognize an identical set of chromosomes under lower stringencies. At the nucleotide sequence level, both chromosome 10 HORs are 50% identical to the HOR on chromosome 12 and to all other alpha satellite DNA sequences from the in situ cross-hybridizing chromosomes, with the exception of chromosome 6. An 80% identity between chromosome 6- and chromosome 10-derived alphoid sequences was observed. These data suggest that the alphoid DNA on chromosomes 6 and 10 may represent a distinct subclass of the dimeric subfamily. These sequences are proposed to be present, along with the more typical dimeric alpha satellite sequences, on a number of different human chromosomes.  相似文献   

15.
G-banding analysis of LRec-1 and LRec-3, spontaneously immortalized cell lines from rat embryo fibroblast, revealed diploid karyotypes with specific clonal structural rearrangements of chromosomes 7 and 19 - del(7)(q11.2q22.1), t(7;19)(q11.1;q12) in malignant stage. Both clonal abnormalities of chromosomes 7 and 19 were also revealed in LRec-1k clone and LRec-1 sf cell line. Previous study of LRec-1 and LRec-3 cells showed the presence of karyotypes with pseudodiploid modal chromosome number, partial trisomy of chromosome 7 and same clonal structural rearrangements of chromosomes 7 and 19 in immortalized stage. In malignant stage, the trisomy 6 and new clonal structural rearrangements of chromosomes 1, 2, 11, 15, 18, 19 and of chromosomes 10, 20 were also found in LRec-1 sf and LRec-1 cells, accordingly. There were no new clonal structural chromosome rearrangements in LRec-1 k and LRec-3 cells. We compared locies of chromosomes involved in rearrangements with mapped genes on these chromosomes according to RATMAP. Supposedly these genes are involved in spontaneous immortalization of rat embryo fibroblast and malignant transformation of LRec-1 and LRec-3 cells and rearrangements of chromosomes 1, 2, 11, 15 and 18 facilitate expression of growth factors of LRec-1 sf cells.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Alphoid DNA is a family of tandemly repeated simple sequences found mainly at the centromeres of the chromosomes of many primates. This paper describes the structure of the alphoid DNA at the centromere of the human Y chromosome. We have used pulsedfield gradient gel electrophoresis, cosmid cloning and DNA sequencing to determine the organization of the alphoid DNA on each of the Y chromosomes present in two somatic cell hybrids. In each case there is a single major block of alphoid DNA. This is approximately 470,000 bases (475 kb) long on one chromosome and approximately 575 kb long on the other. Apart from the size difference, the structures of the two blocks and the surrounding sequences are very similar. However, one restriction enzyme, AvaII, detects two clusters of sites within one block but does not cleave the other. The alphoid DNA within each block is organized into tandemly repeating units, most of which are about 5.7 kb long. A few variant units present on one chromosome are about 6.0 kb long. These variants, like the AvaII site variants, are clustered. The 5.7 kb and 6.0 kb units themselves consist of tandemly repeating 170 base-pair subunits. The 6.0 kb unit has two more of these subunits than the 5.7 kb unit. Our results provide a basis for further structural analysis of the human Y chromosome centromeric region, and suggest that long-range structural polymorphisms of tandemly repeated sequence families may be frequent.  相似文献   

18.
A complete understanding of chromosomal disjunction during mitosis and meiosis in complex genomes such as the human genome awaits detailed characterization of both the molecular structure and genetic behavior of the centromeric regions of chromosomes. Such analyses in turn require knowledge of the organization and nature of DNA sequences associated with centromeres. The most prominent class of centromeric DNA sequences in the human genome is the alpha satellite family of tandemly repeated DNA, which is organized as distinct chromosomal subsets. Each subset is characterized by a particular multimeric higher-order repeat unit consisting of tandemly reiterated, diverged alpha satellite monomers of approximately 171 base pairs. The higher-order repeat units are themselves tandemly reiterated and represent the most recently amplified or fixed alphoid sequences. We present evidence that there are at least two independent domains of alpha satellite DNA on chromosome 7, each characterized by their own distinct higher-order repeat structure. We determined the complete nucleotide sequences of a 6-monomer higher-order repeat unit, which is present in approximately 500 copies per chromosome 7, as well as those of a less-abundant (approximately 10 copies) 16-monomer higher-order repeat unit. Sequence analysis indicated that these repeats are evolutionarily distinct. Genomic hybridization experiments established that each is maintained in relatively homogeneous tandem arrays with no detectable interspersion. We propose mechanisms by which multiple unrelated higher-order repeat domains may be formed and maintained within a single chromosomal subset.  相似文献   

19.
The Sau3A DNA family consists of unique alphoid human repetitive DNA which is prone to be excised from the chromosomes and exhibits restriction fragment length polymorphism. We studied the chromosomal localization of the DNA by in situ hybridization using cultured normal human lymphocytes. Under standard hybridization conditions, the sequence hybridized with the centromeric regions of chromosomes 1, 2, 4, 11, 15, 17, 18, 19 and X, but under high stringency hybridization conditions, it hybridized with the centromeric regions of chromosomes 1, 17 and X, and particularly chromosome 11. Based on these results, we discuss the evolutionary relationship among the sequences of the Sau3A DNA family.  相似文献   

20.
Using G bands, some homologies between the chromosomes of Cebus apella (CAP) and human chromosomes are difficult to establish. To solve this problem, we analyzed these homologies by fluorescence in situ hybridization using human whole chromosome probes (ZOO-FISH). The results indicated that 1) the human probe for chromosome 2 partially hybridizes with CAP chromosomes 13 and 5, 2) the human probe for chromosome 3 partially hybridizes with CAP chromosomes 18 and 20, 3) the human probe for chromosome 9 partially hybridizes with CAP chromosome 19, and 4) the human probe for chromosome 14 hybridizes with the p-terminal and q-terminal regions of CAP chromosome 6. However, none of the human probes employed hybridized with the heterochromatic regions of CAP chromosomes. For this reason, we characterized the heterochromatic regions of CAP chromosomes and of the chromosomes of Pan troglodytes (PTR), to allow comparison between CAP, PTR, and human chromosomes using in situ digestion of fixed chromosomes with the restriction enzymes AluI, HaeIII, and RsaI and by fluorescent staining with DA/DAPI. The results show that 1) centromeric heterochromatin is heterogeneous in the three species studied and 2) noncentromeric heterochromatin is homogeneous within each of the three species, but is different for each species. Thus, centromeric heterochromatin undergoes a higher degree of variability than noncentromeric heterochromatin.  相似文献   

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