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Publication : A complex of serine protease genes expressed preferentially in cytotoxic T-lymphocytes is closely linked to the T-cell receptor alpha- and delta-chain genes on mouse chromosome 14.

First Author  Crosby JL Year  1990
Journal  Genomics Volume  6
Issue  2 Pages  252-9
PubMed ID  2307468 Mgi Jnum  J:10336
Mgi Id  MGI:58788 Doi  10.1016/0888-7543(90)90564-b
Citation  Crosby JL, et al. (1990) A complex of serine protease genes expressed preferentially in cytotoxic T-lymphocytes is closely linked to the T-cell receptor alpha- and delta-chain genes on mouse chromosome 14. Genomics 6(2):252-9
abstractText  A complex of genes encoding serine proteases that are preferentially expressed in cytotoxic T-cells was shown to be closely linked to the T-cell receptor alpha- and delta-chain genes on mouse chromosome 14. A striking difference in recombination frequencies among linkage crosses was reported. Two genes, Np-1 and Tcra, which fail to recombine in crosses involving conventional strains of mice, were shown to recombine readily in interspecific crosses involving Mus spretus. This difference in recombination frequency suggests chromosomal rearrangements that suppress recombination in conventional crosses, recombination hot spots in interspecific crosses, or selection against recombinant haplotypes during development of recombinant inbred strains. Finally, a mutation called disorganization, which is located near the serine protease complex, is of considerable interest because it causes an extraordinarily wide variety of congenital defects. Because of the involvement of serine protease loci in several homeotic mutations in Drosophila, disorganization must be considered a candidate for a mutation in a serine protease-encoding gene.
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