Centromere formation in mouse cells cotransformed with human DNA and a dominant marker gene. |
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Authors: | G Hadlaczky, T Praznovszky, I Cserp n, J Keres , M P terfy, I Kelemen, E Atalay, A Szeles, J Szelei, V Tubak,et al. |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Genetics Biological Research Center, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Szeged. |
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Abstract: | A 13,863-base-pair (bp) putative centromeric DNA fragment has been isolated from a human genomic library by using a probe obtained from metaphase chromosomes of human colon carcinoma cells. The abundance of this DNA was estimated to be 16-32 copies per genome. Cotransfection of mouse cells with this sequence and a selectable marker gene (aminoglycoside 3'-phosphotransferase type II, APH-II) resulted in a transformed cell line carrying an additional centromere in a dicentric chromosome. This centromere was capable of binding an anti-centromere antibody. In situ hybridization demonstrated that the human DNA sequence as well as the APH-II gene and vector DNA sequences were located only in the additional centromere of the dicentric chromosome. The extra centromere separated from the dicentric chromosome, forming a stable minichromosome. This functional centromere linked to a dominant selectable marker may be a step toward the construction of an artificial mammalian chromosome. |
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