Two new haemoglobin variants, provisionally named Hb G and Hb H, were found during a survey of 295 Welsh Mountain cross-bred sheep. Both haemoglobins appear to be beta chain variants controlled by genes allelic to those for the common forms Hb A and Hb B. Studies on an anaemic Hb AH and an Hb AG type sheep showed that Hb G, like Hb A, is replaced by Hb C in anaemia whereas Hb H, like Hb B, is not replaced.
Chromosomes were prepared from lymphocytes of a male domestic pig and flow-sorted on a dual-laser FACS. Twenty spots were observed, corresponding to the known pig karyotype of 18 pairs of autosomes plus the X and Y. DNA was isolated from 10,000 copies of the presumed chromosome 1 spot, restricted with Sau3A, ligated into the vector pGEM4z, and PCR amplified using universal primers; the products were then religated into pUC18. After transformation into Escherichia coli, 210,000 independent colonies were obtained, 5% of which contained only vector DNA. The average insert size of the library was 405 bp. Southern blotting revealed that 36% of the clones contained single-copy DNA and that the remainder contained moderately or highly repetitive DNA. Screening with a (CA)n probe revealed that roughly 1 % of the clones contained microsatellite sequences. A bulk insert of the library was biotinylated by PCR and used as a probe for chromosomal in situ suppression hybridization to pig chromosomes, which confirmed that the library is specific for chromosome 1. However, sequences from the centromeric and telomeric regions seem to be underrepresented in the library.
A panel of bovine‐murine hybrid cell lines was analysed for 10 loci, including three (IGF1, IGHG2 and the calcium release channel gene [CRC]) that have previously been mapped in man, but not in cattle. The IGF and CRC genes were indirectly mapped to chromosomes 5 and 18 respectively and the syntenies of the HOX2 and GH genes and of the NP and FOS genes were confirmed. The results also show that the IGHG2 locus, which is linked to NP and FOS on human chromosome 14, is separated from these genes in cattle. By showing synteny of the IGHG2 and MPI loci, the IGHG2 locus has been indirectly mapped to chromosome 21.
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