Publication | Open Access
Restriction fragment length polymorphisms associated with immunoglobulin C gamma genes reveal linkage disequilibrium and genomic organization.
97
Citations
11
References
1983
Year
GeneticsHuman PolymorphismLinkage AnalysisMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsGenomicsImmune-related Gene PolymorphismGenomic OrganizationGenotype-phenotype AssociationMolecular EcologyGamma MapsAssociation AnalysisHaplotype DeterminationStatistical GeneticsGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsBiologyLinkage DisequilibriumAllelic VariantNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyGene RflpsMedicine
We have demonstrated that restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) produced by BamHI can be used as markers for constant (C) region heavy chain genes C psi gamma (C gamma pseudogene), C gamma 2, and C gamma 4. These RFLPs were found nonrandomly associated in the population sample studied. Of the eight combinations (haplotypes) of RFLPs theoretically possible, only two accounted for a total of 88% of the 116 chromosomes examined, a value greater than the total of 25% expected from random segregation of alleles. This indicates considerable linkage disequilibrium between C psi gamma, C gamma 2, and C gamma 4. Quantitative assessment of the degree of association between C gamma gene RFLPs, Gm markers, and switch region RFLPs adjacent to C mu and C alpha 1 revealed that C psi gamma is most tightly associated with C gamma 2 (r = 0.81 and 0.95 for the two common haplotypes), suggesting that C psi gamma maps to a position lying between C alpha 1 and C gamma 2. The association analysis used here should have general applicability for studying the genomic organization of other multigene families.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1