Vol. 10, Issue 7, 916-923, July 2000
REPORTS
Eleven Densely Clustered Genes, Six of them Novel, in 176 kb of Mouse t-complex DNA
George J.
Kargul,1
Ramaiah
Nagaraja,1
Tokihiko
Shimada,1
Marija J.
Grahovac,1
Meng K.
Lim,1
Hiroshi
Nakashima,1
Paul
Waeltz,1
Peter
Ma,2
Ellson
Chen,2
David
Schlessinger,1 and
Minoru S.H.
Ko1,3
1 Laboratory of Genetics, National Institute on Aging,
National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, Maryland 21224-6820 USA;
2 PE-Applied Biosystems, Foster City, California 94404 USA
Targeted sequencing of the mouse t-complex has started with
a 176-kb, gene-rich BAC localized with six PCR-based markers in inversion 2/3 of the highly duplicated region. The sequence contains 11 genes recovered primarily as cDNAs from early embryonic collections, including Igfals (previously placed on chromosome 17),
Nubp2 (a fully characterized gene), Jsap1 (a
JNK-binding protein), Rsp29 (the mouse homologue of the rat
gene), Ndk3 (a nucleoside diphosphate kinase), and six
additional putative genes of unknown function. With 50% GC content,
75% of the DNA transcribed, and one gene/16.0 kb (on average), the
region may qualify as one of the most gene-dense segments in the mouse
genome and provides candidates for dosage-sensitive phenotypes and
mouse embryonic lethals mapped to the vicinity.
[The sequence
data described in this paper have been submitted to the GenBank data
library under accession no. AF220294.]
3
Corresponding author.
10:916-923 ©2000 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press ISSN 1088-9051/00 $5.00