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Direct Cloning of Human 10q25 Neocentromere DNA Using Transformation-Associated Recombination (TAR) in Yeast
Authors:Michael R Cancilla  Kellie M Tainton  Alyssa E Barry  Vladimir Larionov  Natalya Kouprina  Michael A Resnick  Desiree Du Sart  KHAndy Choo
Institution:aThe Murdoch Institute for Research into Birth Defects, Royal Children's Hospital, Flemington Road, Parkville, 3052, Australia;bLaboratory of Molecular Genetics, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, 27709
Abstract:The transformation-associated recombination (TAR) procedure allows rapid, site-directed cloning of specific human chromosomal regions as yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs). The procedure requires knowledge of only a single, relatively small genomic sequence that resides adjacent to the chromosomal region of interest. We applied this approach to the cloning of the neocentromere DNA of a marker chromosome that we have previously shown to have originated through the activation of a latent centromere at human chromosome 10q25. Using a unique 1.4-kb DNA fragment as a “hook” in TAR experiments, we achieved single-step isolation of the critical neocentromere DNA region as two stable, 110- and 80-kb circular YACs. For obtaining large quantities of highly purified DNA, these YACs were retrofitted with the yeast–bacteria–mammalian-cells shuttle vector BRV1, electroporated intoEscherichia coliDH10B, and isolated as bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs). Extensive characterization of these YACs and BACs by PCR and restriction analyses revealed that they are identical to the corresponding regions of the normal chromosome 10 and provided further support for the formation of the neocentromere within the marker chromosome through epigenetic activation.
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