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Title: High resolution fluorescence in situ hybridization to linearly extended DNA visually maps a tandem repeat associated with facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy immediately adjacent to the telomere of 4q. Author: Bengtsson U, Altherr MR, Wasmuth JJ, Winokur ST. Journal: Hum Mol Genet; 1994 Oct; 3(10):1801-5. PubMed ID: 7849703. Abstract: Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is an autosomal dominant neuromuscular disorder. The FSHD locus has been linked to the most distal genetic markers on the long arm of chromosome 4. An EcoRI fragment length polymorphism segregates with the disease in most FSHD families. Within the EcoRI fragment lies a tandem array of 3.2 kb repeats. Deletions of integral copies of this repeat have been associated with the disease. The 3.2 kbp repeat has recently been shown to cross-hybridize to several regions of heterochromatin in the human genome and DNA sequence analysis reveals strong homology to a class of heterochromatin repeats, LSau. In this report, we demonstrate that the 3.2 kbp tandem repeat lies adjacent to a subtelomeric sequence, which is within 5-14 kb of the telomeric repeat (TTAGGG)n. Direct visual fluorescence hybridization to linearly extended strands of DNA enabled the visualization of this subtelomeric sequence as a short string of signals at the end of a longer string of signals from the differentially labeled 3.2 kbp tandem repeat. Furthermore, in support of our data showing that the 3.2 kbp repeat lies in close proximity to the telomere of 4q, we demonstrated the lack of hybridization of total human DNA to this same region. Our results indicate that the tandem array of 3.2 kbp repeats, disrupted in FSHD, lies immediately adjacent to the telomere of 4q and that the gene responsible for FSHD is likely located proximal to the tandem repeat.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]