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Publication : Universal mapping probes and the origin of human chromosome 3.

First Author  Hino O Year  1993
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  90
Issue  2 Pages  730-4
PubMed ID  8093645 Mgi Jnum  J:3729
Mgi Id  MGI:52238 Doi  10.1073/pnas.90.2.730
Citation  Hino O, et al. (1993) Universal mapping probes and the origin of human chromosome 3. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 90(2):730-4
abstractText  Universal mapping probes (UMPs) are defined as short segments of human DNA that are useful for physical and genetic mapping in a wide variety of mammals. The most useful UMPs contain a conserved DNA sequence immediately adjoined to a highly polymorphic CA repeat. The conserved region determines physical gene location, whereas the CA repeat facilitates genetic mapping. Both the CA repeat and its neighboring sequence are highly conserved in evolution. This permits molecular, cytogenetic, and genetic mapping of UMPs throughout mammalia. UMPs are significant because they make genetic information cumulative among well-studied species and because they transfer such information from map rich organisms to those that are map poor. As a demonstration of the utility of UMPs, comparative maps between human chromosome 3 (HSA3) and the rat genome have been constructed. HSA3 is defined by at least 12 syntenic clusters located on seven different rat chromosomes. These data, together with previous comparative mapping information between human, mouse, and bovine genomes, allow us to propose a distinct evolutionary pathway that connects HSA3 with the chromosomes of rodents, artiodactyls, and primates. The model predicts a parsimonious phylogenetic tree, is readily testable, and will be of considerable use for determining the pathways of mammalian evolution.
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