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X chromosome

About: X chromosome is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 9862 publications have been published within this topic receiving 407354 citations. The topic is also known as: GO:0000805 & chrX.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A cDNA clone corresponding to factor IX has been used to detect homologous sequences in the human genome and should be useful for the detection of carriers of the hemophilia B trait and for prenatal diagnosis in informative families and, more generally, for the establishment of a linkage map of the human X chromosome.
Abstract: Hemophilia B is an X-linked disease caused by a functional deficiency in coagulation factor IX. A cDNA clone corresponding to factor IX has been used to detect homologous sequences in the human genome. All DNA fragments hybridizing to the probe, under medium- or high-stringency conditions, are X-linked, and the patterns obtained suggest that a single large (greater than or equal to 20 kilobases) gene is detected. The gene has been mapped to the q26-q27 region of the long arm of the X chromosome by hybridization to DNA from a panel of human-mouse hybrid cell lines. A search for restriction fragment length polymorphisms using seven restriction enzymes has led to the detection of a Taq I polymorphism, with allelic frequencies of about 0.71 and 0.29. This genetic marker should be useful for the detection of carriers of the hemophilia B trait and for prenatal diagnosis in informative families and, more generally, for the establishment of a linkage map of the human X chromosome.

129 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: A putative scheme with six founder chromosomes is proposed from which most of the observed fragile X-linked haplotypes can be derived directly or by a single event at one of the marker loci, either a change of one repeat unit or a recombination between DXS548 and the mutation target.
Abstract: In order to investigate the origin of mutations responsible for the fragile X syndrome, two polymorphic CA repeats, one at 10 kb (FRAXAC2) and the other at 150 kb (DXS548) from the mutation target, were analyzed in normal and fragil X chromosomes. Contrary to observations made in myotonic dystrophy, fragil X mutations were not strongly associated with a single allele at the marker loci. However, significant differences in allelic and haplotypic distributions were observed between normal and fragile X chromosomes, indicating that a limited number of primary events may have been at the origin of most present-day fragile X chromosomes in Caucasian populations. The authors propose a putative scheme with six founder chromosomes from which most of the observed fragile X-linked haplotypes can be derived directly or by a single event at one of the marker loci, either a change of one repeat unit or a recombination between DXS548 and the mutation target. Such founder chromosomes may have carried a number of CGG repeats in an upper-normal range, from which recurrent multistep expansion mutations have arisen. 23 refs., 2 figs., 3 tabs.

129 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 1998-Genetics
TL;DR: The strong effect on body weight of the QTL on chromosome 11 was additive and independent of sex, accounting for 21-35% of the phenotypic variance of body weight within the corresponding F2 populations.
Abstract: Quantitative trait loci (QTL) influencing body weight were mapped by linkage analysis in crosses between a high body weight selected line (DU6) and a control line (DUKs). The two mouse lines differ in body weight by 106% and in abdominal fat weight by 100% at 42 days. They were generated from the same base population and maintained as outbred colonies. Determination of line-specific allele frequencies at microsatellite markers spanning the genome indicated significant changes between the lines on 15 autosomes and the X chromosome. To confirm these effects, a QTL analysis was performed using structured F2 pedigrees derived from crosses of a single male from DU6 with a female from DUKs. QTL significant at the genome-wide level were mapped for body weight on chromosome 11; for abdominal fat weight on chromosomes 4, 11, and 13; for abdominal fat percentage on chromosomes 3 and 4; and for the weights of liver on chromosomes 4 and 11, of kidney on chromosomes 2 and 9, and of spleen on chromosome 11. The strong effect on body weight of the QTL on chromosome 11 was confirmed in three independent pedigrees. The effect was additive and independent of sex, accounting for 21-35% of the phenotypic variance of body weight within the corresponding F2 populations. The test for multiple QTL on chromosome 11 with combined data from all pedigrees indicated the segregation of two loci separated by 36 cM influencing body weight.

128 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Lyon hypothesis suggests that on a random basis one X chromosome in each cell of the female becomes the Barr body and genetically is relatively inactive; that the decision as to which X chromosome will behave in this manner is made early in development and once made is fixed in all descendants of a given cell.
Abstract: The history of our knowledge of the X chromosome of man is reviewed with appropriate reference to the contributions made through study of other forms. It is noteworthy that sex-linkage was first observed in man. X-linkage has been established for about 60 traits in man. Unlike a majority of autosomal traits in man, most of the observed X-linked traits are recessives (or incomplete recessives). The genetic map of the X chromosome is known only in the most sketchy manner but is likely to be filled in rapidly in the next few years through the use of newly discovered markers, such as the Xga blood group, and cytogenetic investigations of cases of X chromosome anomalies. It appears that the color-vision locus (or loci) is on the short arm and may be rather far from the kinetochore. Based on chiasma counts of autosomes, estimates of the genetic length of the X chromosomes are of the order of 100 map units (1 morgan). Independent segregation of color blindness and night blindness, of color blindness and hemophil...

128 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In vitro analysis using SELEX indicates that the binding specificity of each protein arises from a combination of two zinc fingers and an adjacent domain, which helps to illuminate how chromosome sites mediate essential aspects of meiotic chromosome dynamics.
Abstract: Caenorhabditis elegans chromosomes contain specialized regions called pairing centres, which mediate homologous pairing and synapsis during meiosis. Four related proteins, ZIM-1, 2, 3 and HIM-8, associate with these sites and are required for their essential functions. Here we show that short sequence elements enriched in the corresponding chromosome regions selectively recruit these proteins in vivo. In vitro analysis using SELEX indicates that the binding specificity of each protein arises from a combination of two zinc fingers and an adjacent domain. Insertion of a cluster of recruiting motifs into a chromosome lacking its endogenous pairing centre is sufficient to restore homologous pairing, synapsis, crossover recombination and segregation. These findings help to illuminate how chromosome sites mediate essential aspects of meiotic chromosome dynamics.

128 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202372
2022124
2021192
2020179
2019190
2018186