The generation of DNA probes to chromosome 11q23 by Alu PCR on small numbers of flow-sorted 22q- derivative chromosomes |
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Authors: | F E Cotter S Das E Douek N P Carter B D Young |
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Affiliation: | ICRF Department of Medical Oncology, St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London, England. |
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Abstract: | A strategy for the isolation of DNA probes from small numbers of flow-sorted human chromosomes has been developed. A lymphoblastoid cell line carrying the 22q- derivative chromosome product of the constitutional t(11;22) translocation was used as the source of chromosomes. Synthetic oligonucleotide primers, based on the consensus Alu sequence, were used to amplify inter-Alu sequence from 500 flow-sorted 22q- derivative chromosomes. The amplified sequences were cloned into a plasmid vector by blunt-end ligation, yielding clones with inserts in the range of 400 to 1000 bp. Approximately 70% of these clones hybridized to human DNA as single-copy probes. To identify clones derived from chromosome 11, the library was screened with a heterogeneous probe prepared by Alu-PCR amplification from the DNA of a somatic cell hybrid containing one homology of chromosome 11. All the positive clones found were mapped to within the q23-q25 region of chromosome 11 known to be translocated onto the 22q- derivative chromosome. Further mapping studies showed that most of these probes (7/8) lay between the breakpoints for the t(4;11) translocation of acute lymphocytic leukemia and the t(11;22) of Ewing sarcoma. Thus, the use of Alu-PCR on the small derivative chromosome 22q- has provided a greatly enriched source of probes to region 11q23, a part of the genome that is currently of great interest. This approach will be particularly appropriate to small numbers of chromosomes when high specificity rather than total representation is required. |
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