1996
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.93.9.3958
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Assignment of Rfp-Y to the chicken major histocompatibility complex/NOR microchromosome and evidence for high-frequency recombination associated with the nucleolar organizer region.

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Cited by 135 publications
(78 citation statements)
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“…Overall, the MHC region in chicken stands out in contrast to the MHC in mammals. The chicken MHC is compact and segmented into the MHC-B and MHC-Y regions in which the MHC class I and class II loci reside, as well as genes that changed or moved later in evolutionary time in other species (6,(12)(13)(14)(15). Meiotic recombination within MHC-B is rare (16), but several recombinant haplotypes are available that are suitable for further investigation of MHC-Blinked disease resistance.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Overall, the MHC region in chicken stands out in contrast to the MHC in mammals. The chicken MHC is compact and segmented into the MHC-B and MHC-Y regions in which the MHC class I and class II loci reside, as well as genes that changed or moved later in evolutionary time in other species (6,(12)(13)(14)(15). Meiotic recombination within MHC-B is rare (16), but several recombinant haplotypes are available that are suitable for further investigation of MHC-Blinked disease resistance.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The same feature is found for the Xenopus MHC, in which only one class I gene of the classical type is MHC linked (49), while a large set of linked nonclassical class I genes is found in another gene complex half a chromosome away (50,51). In chickens, two class I genes (one highly expressed) sandwich the TAP1 and TAP2 genes, and Kaufman and colleagues (11,21,52) have proposed that the tight linkage has allowed the particular class I and TAP alleles to coevolve; furthermore, like in frogs, several nonclassical chicken class I genes are found a great distance away from the true MHC on the same chromosome (53). In the banded houndshark Triakis scyllium, there are one or two classical class I genes depending on the haplotype examined (54), and the majority of teleost species examined rigorously (except cod (29) and cichlid (25,26)) have relatively few class I genes in the class I region.…”
Section: Figure 11mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rfp-Y was detected initially when two sets of polymorphic restriction fragments revealed by B system class I and class II probes were found to assort independently of one another in families of fully pedigreed animals (13). Rfp-Y was later found to correspond to the cosmid clusters II/IV and III in the molecular map (19) of chicken MHC genes (14,15).…”
Section: Hla-e -F -G H Imentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Also mapping to chromosome 16 is the single nucleolar organizer region found within the chicken genome (17) and a single nonpolymorphic classical class II␣ locus (18). A chromosomal region supporting highly frequent meiotic recombination, perhaps associated with the nucleolar organizer region, separates B and Rfp-Y such that the two clusters are genetically unlinked even though they are located on the same microchromosome (15,16). This arrangement is quite different from the arrangement of class I loci in the mouse into H-2K and H-2D where the loci remain linked despite physical separation.…”
Section: Hla-e -F -G H Imentioning
confidence: 99%
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