Regional localization on the human X chromosome and polymorphism of the coagulation factor IX gene (hemophilia B locus)

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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 (≥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.

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Camerino, G., Grzeschik, K. H., Jaye, M., De La Salle, H., Tolstoshev, P., Lecocq, J. P., … Mandel, J. L. (1984). Regional localization on the human X chromosome and polymorphism of the coagulation factor IX gene (hemophilia B locus). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 81(2 I), 498–502. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.81.2.498

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