Embryonic lethality and tumorigenesis caused by segmental aneuploidy on mouse chromosome 11. |
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Authors: | P Liu H Zhang A McLellan H Vogel A Bradley |
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Affiliation: | Department of Human and Molecular Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030, USA. |
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Abstract: | Chromosome engineering in mice enables the construction of models of human chromosomal diseases and provides key reagents for genetic studies. To begin to define functional information for a small portion of chromosome 11, deficiencies, duplications, and inversions were constructed in embryonic stem cells with sizes ranging from 1 Mb to 22 cM. Two deficiencies and three duplications were established in the mouse germline. Mice with a 1-Mb duplication developed corneal hyperplasia and thymic tumors, while two different 3- to 4-cM deficiencies were embryonically lethal in heterozygous mice. A duplication corresponding to one of these two deficiencies was able to rescue its haplolethality. |
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