Fine mapping suggests that the goat Polled Intersex Syndrome and the human Blephorophimosis Ptosis Epicanthus Syndrome map to a 100-kb homologous region

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Abstract

To clone the goat Polled Intersex Syndrome (PIS) gene(s), a chromosome walk was performed from six entry points at 1q43. This enabled 91 BACs to be recovered from a recently constructed goat BAC library. Six BAC contigs of goat chromosome 1q43 (ICC1-ICC6) were thus constructed covering altogether 4.5 Mb. A total of 37 microsatellite sequences were isolated from this 4.5-Mb region (16 in this study), of which 33 were genotyped and mapped. ICC3 (1500 kb) was shown by genetic analysis to encompass the PIS locus in a ~400-kb interval without recombinants detected in the resource families (293 informative meioses). A strong linkage disequilibrium was detected among unrelated animals with the two central markers of the region, suggesting a probable location for PIS in ~100 kb. High-resolution comparative mapping with human data shows that this DNA segment is the homolog of the human region associated with Blepharophimosis Ptosis Epicanthus inversus Syndrome (BPES) gene located in 3q23. This finding suggests that homologous gene(s) could be responsible for the pathologies observed in humans and goats.

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Schibler, L., Cribiu, E. P., Oustry-Vaiman, A., Furet, J. P., & Vaiman, D. (2000). Fine mapping suggests that the goat Polled Intersex Syndrome and the human Blephorophimosis Ptosis Epicanthus Syndrome map to a 100-kb homologous region. Genome Research, 10(3), 311–318. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.10.3.311

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