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Publication : Analysis of distribution in the human, pig, and rat genomes points toward a general subtelomeric origin of minisatellite structures.

First Author  Amarger V Year  1998
Journal  Genomics Volume  52
Issue  1 Pages  62-71
PubMed ID  9740672 Mgi Jnum  J:55910
Mgi Id  MGI:1339545 Doi  10.1006/geno.1998.5365
Citation  Amarger V, et al. (1998) Analysis of distribution in the human, pig, and rat genomes points toward a general subtelomeric origin of minisatellite structures [published erratum appears in Genomics 1999 May 15;58(1):109-10]. Genomics 52(1):62-71
abstractText  We have developed approaches for the cloning of minisatellites from total genomic libraries and applied these approaches to the human, rat, and pig genomes. The chromosomal distribution of minisatellites in the three genomes is strikingly different, with clustering at chromosome ends in human, a seemingly almost even distribution in rat, and an intermediate situation in pig. A closer analysis, however, reveals that interstitial sites in pig and rat often correspond to terminal cytogenetic bands in human. This observation suggests that minisatellites are created toward chromosome ends and their internalization represents secondary events resulting from rearrangements involving chromosome ends. Copyright 1998 Academic Press.
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