Genes and genomes: Chromosome bands – flavours to savour
✍ Scribed by Jeffrey M. Craig; Wendy A. Bickmore
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 782 KB
- Volume
- 15
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0265-9247
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The mammalian chromosome is longitudinally heterogeneous in structure and function and this is the basis for the specific banding patterns produced by various chromosome staining techniques. The two most frequently used techniques are G, or Giemsa banding and R, or reverse banding. Each type of stained band is characterised by variations in gene density, time of replication, base composition, density of repeat sequences, and chromatin packaging. It is increasingly apparent that R and G bands, which are complementary to each other, represent separate compartments of the euchromatic human genome, with R bands containing the vast majority of genes. R bands are also more GC-rich, contain a higher density of Alu repeats, and replicate earlier in S phase, than G bands. These properties may be interdependent and may have coevolved.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
packaged in vitro to produce recombinant phage clones. From the dissected 10 pg of DNA, 80 phage clones were obtained which hybridiLed in situ to the chromosomal rcgion of dissection.
A broad region of chromosome 10 (chr10) has engendered continued interest in the etiology of late-onset Alzheimer Disease (LOAD) from both linkage and candidate gene studies. However, there is a very extensive heterogeneity on chr10. We converged linkage analysis and gene expression data using the c
Genetic mapping of polymorphic C-bands allows direct comparisons between genetic and physical maps. Eleven C-bands and two seed storage protein genes on chromosome 1B, polymorphic between Langdon durum and four accessions of T. dicoccoides, were used to study the distribution of recombination along