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Publication : Genomic rearrangement of the alpha-globin gene complex during mammalian evolution.

First Author  Tan H Year  1993
Journal  Biochem Genet Volume  31
Issue  11-12 Pages  473-84
PubMed ID  8166621 Mgi Jnum  J:16711
Mgi Id  MGI:64775 Doi  10.1007/BF02426879
Citation  Tan H, et al. (1993) Genomic rearrangement of the alpha-globin gene complex during mammalian evolution. Biochem Genet 31(11-12):473-84
abstractText  In man, the gene for hydroxyacyl glutathione hydrolase (HAGH; glyoxalase II) is closely linked to the alpha-globin locus (HB alpha) on Chromosome 16. HAGH polymorphism in the mouse has now enabled the mapping of the murine homologue. Deletion mapping, congenic strain studies, and characterization of 41 recombinant inbred strains establish that the mouse Hagh locus lies very close to the alpha-globin pseudogene (Hba-ps4) in the vicinity of the major histocompatibility locus (H-2) on chromosome 17. Several other loci have been identified previously that are also closely linked to the human alpha-globin locus but near the alpha-globin pseudogene Hba-ps4 in the mouse. These linkage relationships suggest that during the evolution of mice a translocation occurred that subdivided the alpha-globin locus, leaving one inactive alpha-globin gene still associated with the Hagh locus and linked sequences, while moving and inserting the active alpha-globin locus and all distal sequences into an internal location on another autosome, the predecessor to mouse chromosome 11.
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