Publication | Open Access
Chromosome assignments of four mouse cellular homologs of sarcoma and leukemia virus oncogenes.
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Citations
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References
1984
Year
Viral ReplicationCytogeneticsGeneticsPathologySarcoma VirusMolecular GeneticsGenomicsMouse Cellular HomologsVirus GeneViral GeneticsVirologyChromosomal RearrangementChromosome AssignmentsCell BiologyMolecular ProbesRous Sarcoma VirusChromatinChromosome DynamicsMolecular VirologyChromatin StructureChromosome BiologyLeukemia Virus OncogenesMedicineViral Oncology
Molecular probes for the oncogenes of Rous sarcoma virus (v-src), avian myeloblastosis virus (v-myb), Kirsten murine sarcoma virus (v-Ki-ras), and Harvey murine sarcoma virus (v-Ha-ras) were hybridized to the DNA from mouse-Chinese hamster somatic cell hybrids. The v-src, v-myb, v-Ki-ras, and v-Ha-ras genes each detected one or a few homologous mouse DNA fragments whose segregation was analyzed in cell hybrids. Mouse cellular homologs c-src, c-Ki-ras, c-Ha-ras, and c-myb segregated concordantly with chromosomes 2, 6, 7, and 10, respectively. Comparison with the known locations of human c-src (chromosome 20) and human c-Ha-ras1 (chromosome 11 short arm) suggests that the human and mouse homologs of these two viral oncogenes reside in conserved linkage groups. The c-Ki-ras gene on mouse chromosome 6 might reside also in a conserved linkage group, along with glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and triosephosphate isomerase. However, direct confirmation of this suggestion must await a demonstration that c-Ki-ras on mouse chromosome 6 is homologous to c-Ki-ras2 on the short arm of human chromosome 12.
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