Genomic Organization of the Murine Miller–Dieker/Lissencephaly Region: Conservation of Linkage with the Human Region

  1. Shinji Hirotsune1,
  2. Svetlana D. Pack2,
  3. Samuel S. Chong2,
  4. Christiane M. Robbins3,
  5. William J. Pavan1,
  6. David H. Ledbetter2,4, and
  7. Anthony Wynshaw-Boris1,5
  1. 1Laboratory of Genetic Disease Research, 2Diagnostic Development Branch, and 3Sequencing Core Facility, National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892-4470

Abstract

Several human syndromes are associated with haploinsufficiency of chromosomal regions secondary to microdeletions. Isolated lissencephaly sequence (ILS), a human developmental disease characterized by a smooth cerebral surface (classical lissencephaly) and microscopic evidence of incomplete neuronal migration, is often associated with small deletions or translocations at chromosome 17p13.3. Miller–Dieker syndrome (MDS) is associated with larger deletions of 17p13.3 and consists of classical lissencephaly with additional phenotypes including facial abnormalities. We have isolated the murine homologs of three genes located inside and outside the MDS region: Lis1, Mnt/Rox, and14-3-3ε. These genes are all located on mouse chromosome 11B2, as determined by metaphase FISH, and the relative order and approximate gene distance was determined by interphase FISH analysis. The transcriptional orientation and intergenic distance ofLis1 and Mnt/Rox were ascertained by fragmentation analysis of a mouse yeast artificial chromosome containing both genes. To determine the distance and orientation of 14-3-3ε with respect to Lis1 and Mnt/Rox, we introduced a super-rare cutter site (VDE) that is unique in the mouse genome into 14-3-3ε by gene targeting. Using the introducedVDE site, the orientation of this gene was determined by pulsed field gel electrophoresis and Southern blot analysis. Our results demonstrate that the MDS region is conserved between human and mouse. This conservation of linkage suggests that the mouse can be used to model microdeletions that occur in ILS and MDS.

Footnotes

  • 4 Present address: Center for Medical Genetics, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637–1470.

  • 5 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL tonywb{at}nhgri.nih.gov; FAX (301) 402–2170.

    • Received February 11, 1997.
    • Accepted April 1, 1997.
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