Awardee OrganizationCASE WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
The centromeric regions of human chromosomes are dominated by a class of
tandemly repeated DNA, alpha satellite, which consists of an extensive
group of related, highly diverged repeats, based on a monomer repeat length
of ~171 basepairs. Long tandem arrays of alpha satellite, estimated to be
hundreds to thousands of kilobasepairs long, are located at the centromeric
region of each chromosome. In some cases, centromeric regions are
characterized by multiple, independent alpha satellite subsets or by
subsets of different classes of satellite DNA (beta or classical), in
addition to alpha satellite. Because conventional strategies for mapping
human chromosomes cannot easily accommodate long, megabase stretches of
repetitive DNA, a directed approach is required for high-resolution
physical and genetic mapping of the centromeric region of each human
chromosome, for full integration into the complete chromosome maps being
generated in other laboratories. The current proposal is an extension of
our centromere mapping project, which has been ongoing for the past two
years. We propose: (i) to isolate representative DNA probes for the
alpha, beta, and classical satellite classes located at or near the
centromere of all 24 types of human chromosome and to develop specific
sequence tagged sites (STS's) for these centromeric loci; (ii) to develop
high-frequency polymorphisms for each centromeric locus and to genotype the
40 CEPH families to contribute to centromere-based genetic linkage maps of
each chromosome; (iii) to measure the size and amount of variation of
centromeric DNA for each chromosome in a representative collection of
individuals to provide a physical estimate to close the "centromere gap" in
conventional maps of each chromosome; and (iv) to characterize in detail
the complete arrays of four centromeres selected as models (chromosomes
4,7,17, and X), using one- and two-dimensional long-range pulsed-field
mapping and short- and long-range cloning in lambda phage and in yeast
artificial chromosomes, and strategies designed to identify and clone the
junctions between the edges of the centromere array and the chromosome
arms. The proposed studies address directly several of the Five-Year Goals
of the Human Genome Project: to complete a fully connected human genetic
map by providing a polymorphic marker, identified by an STS, at the
centromere of each chromosome; to contribute to a fully assembled STS
physical map of each human chromosome by providing a well-characterized STS
at the centromere of each chromosome and by generating the pulsed-field
restriction mapping data needed to fully integrate the centromere into
complete chromosome maps; and to generate overlapping sets of closely
spaced, ordered markers that span the centromeres of selected chromosomes,
with continuity over several million basepairs.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
DNAartificial chromosomesbacteriophage lambdacentromerechromosomesgel electrophoresisgene duplicationgenetic librarygenetic manipulationgenetic mappinggenetic markersgenetic polymorphismgenotypehuman genetic material taghuman population geneticshuman tissuein situ hybridizationlinkage mappingmolecular cloningnucleic acid probespolymerase chain reactionpulsed field gel electrophoresissequence tagged sites
No Sub Projects information available for 7R01HG000107-06
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