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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

HemT-3, an alternative transcript of mouse gene HemT specific to male germ cells.

A number of genes are known to be expressed primarily in hematopoietic cells and testis and are thought to function in the control of both blood cell and male germ cell differentiation. We have recently identified a mouse gene, HemT, that encodes two alternatively spliced transcripts specific to hematopoietic cells (HemT-1 and HemT-2) and kidney (HemT-2). We have now isolated a third HemT transcript, HemT-3, that is found only in testis by Northern blot analysis and RT-PCR. HemT-3 is alternatively spliced and may be initiated differently from HemT-1 and HemT-2. RNA in-situ hybridization of testis from wild-type and germ-cell-deficient adult mice, as well as from mice at different developmental stages, indicates that HemT-3 is expressed only in early spermatocytes. HemT-3 cDNA has a major open reading frame related to a human glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored protein, GML. Using an antibody generated against a peptide derived from the HemT-3 open reading frame, we have detected a testis-specific 22kDa protein by Western blot analysis.[1]

References

  1. HemT-3, an alternative transcript of mouse gene HemT specific to male germ cells. Xue, H., O'Neill, D., Wang, X., Wolgemuth, D.J., Bank, A. Gene (1999) [Pubmed]
 
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