Localization of the photoreceptor gene ROM1 to human chromosome 11 and mouse chromosome 19: sublocalization to human 11q13 between PGA and PYGM.

RA Bascom, J Garcia-Heras, CL Hsieh… - American journal of …, 1992 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
RA Bascom, J Garcia-Heras, CL Hsieh, DS Gerhard, C Jones, U Francke, HF Willard
American journal of human genetics, 1992ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Rom-1 is a retinal integral membrane protein that, together with the product of the human
retinal degeneration slow gene (RDS), defines a photoreceptor-specific protein family. The
gene for rom-1 (HGM symbol: ROM1) has been assigned to human chromosome 11 and
mouse chromosome 19 by Southern blot analysis of somatic cell hybrid DNAs. ROM1 was
regionally sublocalized to human 11p13-11q13 by using three mouse-human somatic cell
hybrids; in situ hybridization refined the sublocalization to human 11q13. Analysis of somatic …
Abstract
Rom-1 is a retinal integral membrane protein that, together with the product of the human retinal degeneration slow gene (RDS), defines a photoreceptor-specific protein family. The gene for rom-1 (HGM symbol: ROM1) has been assigned to human chromosome 11 and mouse chromosome 19 by Southern blot analysis of somatic cell hybrid DNAs. ROM1 was regionally sublocalized to human 11p13-11q13 by using three mouse-human somatic cell hybrids; in situ hybridization refined the sublocalization to human 11q13. Analysis of somatic cell hybrids suggested that the most likely localization of ROM1 is in the approximately 2-cM interval between human PGA (human pepsinogen A) and PYGM (muscle glycogen phosphorylase). ROM1 appears to be a new member of a conserved syntenic group whose members include such genes as CD5, CD20, and OSBP (oxysterol-binding protein), on human chromosome 11 and mouse chromosome 19. Localization of the ROM1 gene will permit the examination of its linkage to hereditary retinopathies in man and mouse.
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