Construction of neocentromere-based human minichromosomes by telomere-associated chromosomal truncation


Autoria(s): Saffery, Richard; Wong, Lee H.; Irvine, Danielle V.; Bateman, Melissa A.; Griffiths, Belinda; Cutts, Suzanne M.; Cancilla, Michael R.; Cendron, Angela C.; Stafford, Angela J.; Choo, K. H. Andy
Data(s)

08/05/2001

01/05/2001

Resumo

Neocentromeres (NCs) are fully functional centromeres that arise ectopically in noncentromeric regions lacking α-satellite DNA. Using telomere-associated chromosome truncation, we have produced a series of minichromosomes (MiCs) from a mardel(10) marker chromosome containing a previously characterized human NC. These MiCs range in size from ≈0.7 to 1.8 Mb and contain single-copy intact genomic DNA from the 10q25 region. Two of these NC-based Mi-Cs (NC-MiCs) appear circular whereas one is linear. All demonstrate stability in both structure and mitotic transmission in the absence of drug selection. Presence of a functional NC is shown by binding a host of key centromere-associated proteins. These NC-MiCs provide direct evidence for mitotic segregation function of the NC DNA and represent examples of stable mammalian MiCs lacking centromeric repeats.

Identificador

/pmc/articles/PMC33277/

/pubmed/11331754

http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.091468498

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

The National Academy of Sciences

Direitos

Copyright © 2001, The National Academy of Sciences

Palavras-Chave #Biological Sciences
Tipo

Text