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Vol. 9, Issue 9, 888-894, September 1999
RESOURCE
Characterization of Physical Gap Sizes at Human Telomeres
Christa M.
Lese,1
Judy A.
Fantes,1
Harold C.
Riethman,2 and
David H.
Ledbetter1,3
1 Department of Human Genetics, The University of Chicago,
Chicago, Illinois 60637 USA; 2 The Wistar Institute,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104 USA
Genome-wide physical and genetic mapping efforts have not yet fully
addressed the problem of closure at the telomeric ends of human
chromosomes. Targeted efforts at cloning human and mouse telomeres have
succeeded in identifying unique sequences at most telomeres, but gap
sizes between these telomere clones and the distal markers on
integrated genetic/physical maps remain largely unknown. As telomeric
regions are known to be the most gene-rich regions of the human genome,
filling these gaps should have a high priority in completion of the
Human Genome Project. We reported previously a first generation set of
unique sequence probes for human telomeric regions. Of 41 human
telomere regions, 33 were represented by unique clones with a known
distance ( 300 kb) from the end of the chromosome; clones for the
remaining eight telomeric regions had not yet been identified and were
represented by the most distal markers on the integrated
genetic/physical map. We have identified unique telomere clones for
four of the remaining telomeres, 9p, 12p, 15q, and 16p. To determine
the telomeric gap size for these chromosomes and five other human
telomeres, interphase FISH analysis was performed to measure the
distance between each telomere clone and the corresponding most distal
marker. These studies provide distance estimates ranging from <100
kb to >1 Mb, thus defining the physical mapping task for filling
telomeric gaps.
3
Corresponding author.
9:888-894 ©1999 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press ISSN 1088-9051/99 $5.00

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