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

Chromosome segregation is frequently associated with the expression of recessive mutations in mouse cells.

The genes coding for adenosine kinase (ADK; ATP:adenosine 5'-phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.20) and esterase-10 (ES-10; carboxylesterase, carboxylic-ester hydrolase, EC 3.1.1.1) are both located on chromosome 14 in the mouse. The near-diploid mouse cell line CAK is heterozygous for two electrophoretic variants of ES-10. Recessive Adk- mutants of CAK have been isolated and analyzed for Es-10 phenotype and karyotypic abnormalities. Two classes of mutants were found with approximatley equal frequencies: those that remained heterozygous in the expression of Es-10 and those that expressed only one Es-10 allele. Of the mutants that lacked one form of ES-10, approximately half were missing most or all of one copy of chromosome 14; the other contained two copies of 14, frequently in the form of an isochromosome. There were no abnormalities of this chromosome found among the mutants that were Es-10 heterozygotes. These results suggest that the expression of an autosomal recessive mutation in near-diploid mouse cells is frequently associated with events that result in the segregation of a physically linked marker and part or all of a chromosome.[1]

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