Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:Q00604 (X-linked)
16,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The gene for the X-linked Kallmann syndrome (KAL), a developmental disorder characterized by hypogonadotropic hypogonadism and anosmia, maps to Xp22.3 and has a homologous locus, KALP, on Yq11. We show here that KAL consists of 14 exons spanning 120-200 kilobases that correlate with the distribution of domains in the predicted protein including four fibronectin type III repeats. The KALP locus reveals several large deletions and a number of small insertions, deletions and base substitutions which indicate it is a non-processed pseudogene. The sequence divergence between KAL and KALP in humans, and the chromosomal location of KAL homologous sequences in other primates, suggest that KALP and the steroid sulphatase pseudogene on Yq11 were involved in the same rearrangement event on the Y chromosome during primate evolution.
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PMID:Structure of the X-linked Kallmann syndrome gene and its homologous pseudogene on the Y chromosome. 130 84

The region surrounding the steroid sulfatase (STS) locus on Xp22.3 is of particular interest since it represents a deletion hot spot, shares homology with the proximal long arm of the Y chromosome (Yq11.2), and contains genes for several well-described X-linked disorders. Here we describe yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs) covering 450 kb around the STS gene. Eight YAC clones were isolated from a human YAC library. Their STS exon content was determined and the overlap of the clones characterized. Two of the YAC clones were found to contain the entire STS gene. The most proximal and the most distal ends of the YAC contig were cloned but neither of them crossed the breakpoints in any of the previously described patients with entire STS gene deletions. This is consistent with deletions larger than 500 kb in all these patients. One of the YAC clones was found to contain sequences from the STS pseudogene on Yq11.2. Two anonymous DNA sequences, GMGXY19 and GMGXY3, previously mapped in the vicinity of the STS locus, were found within the YAC contig and their assignment with respect to the STS locus was thus possible. This contig is useful for the overlap cloning of the Xp22.3 region and for reverse genetic strategies for the isolation of disease genes in the region. Furthermore, it may provide insight into the molecular mechanisms of deletion and translocation events on Xp22.3 and in the evolution of sex chromosomes.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of a yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) contig around the human steroid sulfatase gene. 173 66

Several highly homologous glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPD)-related sequences have been identified previously in human DNA by Southern blot analysis. Protein studies have identified only a single expressed locus for this major glycolytic enzyme, and this maps to chromosome 12p13. Sequence analysis of a GAPD muscle cDNA clone and a GAPD-related clone retrieved from an X-chromosome recombinant library showed that the latter was a processed pseudogene that maps to Xp11-p21. In this study, we have determined the chromosomal locations of several of the additional GAPD-related human sequences using a short 3' end sequence from the cDNA to probe DNA from a series of human-rodent somatic cell hybrids on Southern blots. Eight HindIII GAPD-related sequences detected at high stringency have been mapped to 6 different chromosomes. Several of the additional sequences detected at more moderate stringency have been localized to a further 10 chromosomal sites. Together, these sites constitute the known expressed locus, the known X-linked pseudogene, and 15 GAPD-like loci.
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PMID:Members of the human glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase-related gene family map to dispersed chromosomal locations. 279 78

A clone that cross-hybridized with a full-length human cDNA PGK probe was isolated from a hill kangaroo (Macropus robustus: Marsupialia) lambda EMBL4 EcoRI genomic library. The clone was sequenced and demonstrated to be a pseudogene, with two deletions (one of 3 bases, the other 24 bases long), one single base insertion, and a nonsense mutation with respect to the functional human X-linked gene. It is flanked by terminal repeats in the 5' and 3' noncoding regions, but it has no 3' poly(A) remnant. The 3' untranslated region has a 34-bp sequence, with 29 bp homologous to the human 3' untranslated region. The overall percentage homology with the mouse and human X-linked PGK indicates that this pseudogene is probably more closely related to eutherian X-linked PGK genes than to the autosomal form. The results also suggest that pseudogenes are of considerable antiquity (greater than 100 MYr) in the mammalian lineage.
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PMID:A marsupial phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) processed pseudogene. 279 81

Several phosphoglycerate kinase genes were previously detected in the human genome by blot hybridization with a phosphoglycerate kinase cDNA probe. Using subcloned fragments of the cDNA we estimate the presence of four independent phosphoglycerate kinase genes. These genes have been mapped to both the human X chromosome (band q13) and chromosome 6 (p12-21.1) using a panel of human-rodent somatic cell hybrids and by chromosomal in situ hybridization. The genomic distribution of phosphoglycerate kinase sequences is conserved in man and mouse, not only for the X chromosome, but also for linkage to the respective major histocompatibility complexes. Molecular cloning of X-linked phosphoglycerate kinase sequences led to the identification of a novel intronless phosphoglycerate kinase pseudogene which is localized proximal to the active gene on the X chromosome.
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PMID:The human phosphoglycerate kinase multigene family. HLA-associated sequences and an X-linked locus containing a processed pseudogene and its functional counterpart. 298 38

We have used a cDNA clone for human phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) to examine the chromosomal localization of three members of the human PGK gene family. Using somatic cell hybrids segregating portions of several X-autosome translocations as well as a clone panel of hybrids segregating radiation-induced fragments of the human X chromosome, we assign a PGK pseudogene to the region Xq11-Xq13, proximal to the functional X-linked PGK gene located in Xq13. In addition, using a panel of 24 somatic cell hybrids, we assign an autosomal PGK-related DNA sequence to human chromosome 19.
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PMID:Regional localization of the phosphoglycerate kinase gene and pseudogene on the human X chromosome and assignment of a related DNA sequence to chromosome 19. 299 34

Phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) (ATP:3-phospho-D-glycerate 1-phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.2.3) is a metabolic enzyme functioning in the Embden-Meyerhof pathway that converts glucose (or fructose) to pyruvate. Two functional loci for the production of PGK have been identified in the mammalian genome. PGK-1 is an X-linked gene expressed constitutively in all somatic cells and premeitotic germ cells. The human PGK-1 gene consists of 11 exons and 10 introns encompassing a region approximately 23 kilobases (kb) in length. PGK-2 is an autosomal gene expressed in a tissue-specific manner exclusively in the late stages of spermatogenesis. In the present study, a molecular analysis of a human genomic clone of PGK-2 originally isolated by Szabo et al. has revealed that this autosomal sequence completely lacks introns and contains characteristics of a processed gene, or 'retroposon', including the remnants of a poly(A)+ tail and bounding direct repeats. Typically such processed sequences form non-functional pseudogenes that have evolved multiple genetic lesions which preclude translation of any transcript into a functional polypeptide. For example, an X-linked processed pseudogene of PGK-1 (psi PGK-1) in humans has been identified and shown to contain premature termination codons in all reading frames. It was therefore unexpected to find that the intronless autosomal PGK sequence reported here is not a pseudogene, but is rather a functional gene that has retained a complete open reading frame, and is actively expressed in mammalian spermatogenesis. Both the unusual conservation of function in this processed PGK-2 gene and its tissue-specific expression in spermatogenesis are best explained as a compensatory response to the inactivation of the X-linked PGK-1 gene in spermatogenic cells before meiosis.
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PMID:Human testis-specific PGK gene lacks introns and possesses characteristics of a processed gene. 345 21

We have carried out a comparative analysis of DNase I sensitivity of the active and inactive X-linked phosphoglycerate kinase (Pgk) genes in human lymphoblast and fibroblast cultured cells. Three DNase I-sensitive regions were detected: a 5' hypersensitive site, a sensitive region in the interior of the gene and a 3' slightly sensitive site which we previously reported and have now mapped with some precision. A comparison of these sensitive sites in single and multiple X cell lines indicates that the sensitive sites are unique to the active X chromosome. A similar study of an X-linked Pgk pseudogene shows no difference in DNase I sensitivity between the pseudogenes on the active and inactive X chromosomes. These latter results imply that sex chromatin does not confer a unique level of DNase I resistance to DNA on the inactive X chromosome. The exact role of sex chromatin in differential DNase I sensitivity of genes on the inactive and active X chromosomes is discussed.
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PMID:Chromatin structure of active and inactive human X-linked phosphoglycerate kinase gene. 345 75

Hybridization of DNA samples prepared from flow-sorted human chromosomes with a cDNA probe for the X-linked glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) suggested the existence of the G6PD-like locus on chromosome 17. Southern hybridization analysis of endonuclease-digested DNA samples from the human-mouse hybrid cell line with human chromosome 17, and from control human and mouse cells, proved that not only X chromosomes, but also chromosome 17, contain DNA sequences that are hybridizable with the G6PD cDNA probe. The G6PD-like locus on chromosome 17 could be a putative pseudogene or a functional gene for the fetal brain-specific G6PD isozyme or other protein.
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PMID:Existence of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase-like locus on chromosome 17. 375 86

The human genome contains several DNA sequences homologous to cDNA for X-linked phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK). In the course of screening a genomic library containing a mutant gene for X-linked PGK (PGK-Matsue), we obtained a recombinant clone that cross-hybridizes to PGK cDNA. Restriction analysis suggests that the clone overlaps with a clone previously found to originate from chromosome 6, and which has been suggested to code for testis-specific PGK [Szabo et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 81 (1984) 3167-3169]. The DNA fragment we have cloned contains 1252 bp that are homologous to the coding part of human PGK cDNA, and has an initiation codon, an in-phase termination codon, direct flanking repeats, and no introns. The maximum homology between the DNA and PGK cDNA is 85% at the coding nucleotide level, and it is 86.2% at the translated protein level; homology is also found in their 3'-flanking sequences and adenine-rich tails. These results suggest that the cloned DNA is most likely a processed pseudogene for PGK located on chromosome 6.
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PMID:Molecular cloning and structure of an autosomal processed gene for human phosphoglycerate kinase. 383 63


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