Publication | Open Access
Evolution and organization of the fibrinogen locus on chromosome 4: gene duplication accompanied by transposition and inversion.
266
Citations
33
References
1985
Year
CytogeneticsGeneticsMolecular BiologyGene CharacterizationMolecular GeneticsGenomicsGene DuplicationGene StructureFibrinogen GenesFibrinogen LocusImmunoglobulin GenesGenetic VariationChromosomal RearrangementGene ExpressionChromosome 4Remote TranspositionChromosome DynamicsGenetic DisorderNatural SciencesGenetic MechanismChromosome BiologyMedicine
Human fibrinogen cDNA probes for the alpha-, beta-, and gamma-polypeptide chains have been used to isolate the corresponding genes from human genomic libraries. There is a single copy of each gene. Restriction endonuclease analysis of isolated genomic clones and human genomic DNA indicates that the human alpha-, beta-, and gamma-fibrinogen genes are closely linked in a 50-kilobase region of a single human chromosome: the alpha-gene in the middle flanked by the beta-gene on one side and the gamma-gene on the other. The alpha- and gamma-chain genes are oriented in tandem and transcribed toward the beta-chain gene. The beta-chain gene is transcribed from the opposite DNA strand toward the gamma- and alpha-chain genes. The three genes have been localized to the distal third of the long arm of chromosome 4, bands q23-q32, by in situ hybridization with fibrinogen cDNAs and by examination of DNA from multiple rodent-human somatic cell hybrids. Alternative explanations for the present arrangement of the three fibrinogen genes involve either a three-step mechanism with inversion of the alpha/gamma-region or a two-step mechanism involving remote transposition and inversion. The second more simple mechanism has a precedent in the origin of repeated regions of the fibrinogen and immunoglobulin genes.
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