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Publication : The murine leukemia inhibition factor gene (Lif) is located on proximal chromosome 11, not chromosome 13.

First Author  Bottorff D Year  1992
Journal  Mamm Genome Volume  3
Issue  12 Pages  681-4
PubMed ID  1477476 Mgi Jnum  J:3517
Mgi Id  MGI:52030 Doi  10.1007/BF00444362
Citation  Bottorff D, et al. (1992) The murine leukemia inhibition factor gene (Lif) is located on proximal chromosome 11, not chromosome 13. Mamm Genome 3(12):681-4
abstractText  Lif, the murine gene encoding leukemia inhibition factor (LIF), has been previously localized to proximal Chromosome (Chr) 11. Hilda, the murine gene encoding human interleukin in DA cells (HILDA) has been localized to Chr 13. Since these two growth factors are identical, the proposal for two different structural loci is intriguing. To address this issue, blot hybridization methods have been used to establish the position of the structural gene sequence unambiguously. DNAs from somatic cell hybrids, recombinant inbred mice, and backcross mice have been probed with a sequence that encodes LIF/HILDA. The results support the assignment of this sequence to proximal Chr 11. These studies also establish a synteny group, including Lif and Tcn-2, the structural gene for transcobalamin 2, that is conserved between man and mouse.
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