Complete sequence of human vinculin and assignment of the gene to chromosome 10

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Abstract

We have determined the complete sequence of human vinculin, a cytoskeletal protein associated with cell-cell and cell-matrix junctions. Comparison of human and chicken embryo vinculin sequences shows that both proteins contain 1066 amino acids and exhibit a high level of sequence identity (>95%). The region of greatest divergence falls within three 112-amino acid repeats spanning residues 259-589. Interestingly, nematode vinculin lacks one of these central repeats. The regions of human vinculin that are N- and C-terminal to the repeats show 54% and 61% sequence identity, respectively, to nematode vinculin. Southern blots of human genomic DNA hybridized with short vinculin cDNA fragments indicate that there is a single vinculin gene. By using a panel of human-rodent somatic cell hybrids, the human vinculin gene was mapped to chromosome 10q11.2-qter. (.

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Weller, P. A., Ogryzko, E. P., Corben, E. B., Zhidkova, N. I., Patel, B., Price, G. J., … Critchley, D. R. (1990). Complete sequence of human vinculin and assignment of the gene to chromosome 10. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 87(15), 5667–5671. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.87.15.5667

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