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Title: The distribution of binding sites for centromere protein B (CENP-B) is partly conserved among diverged higher order repeating units of human chromosome 6-specific alphoid DNA. Author: Sugimoto K, Furukawa K, Kusumi K, Himeno M. Journal: Chromosome Res; 1997 Sep; 5(6):395-405. PubMed ID: 9364941. Abstract: We previously reported the isolation of alphoid satellite clones from a human genomic library using a DNA immunoprecipitation with centromere protein B (CENP-B). Here, we have characterized the distribution of CENP-B-binding sites on the 3-kb BamHI repeats of the cos2 clone. Using in situ hybridization, this alphoid satellite was located primarily at the centromeric region of chromosome 6. The functional binding sites were mapped by precipitating the restriction fragments with recombinant CENP-B in vitro. One repeat (2B3-11) consisted of 19 copies of alphoid monomer, eight of which possessed the binding sites, while another (2B3-9) consisted of 18 copies of the monomer, seven of which possessed the binding sites. The distribution of the sites was well conserved between them, except for the terminus. A similar analysis with the remaining 6-kb region suggested the presence of a continuous 1-kb region with regular spacing of EcoRI sites and the CENP-B-binding sites. When the nucleotide sequence of 2B3-11 was compared with that of another chromosome 6-specific alphoid repeat (p308) that had been described previously, this 1-kb region was highly conserved between them. The distribution of the CENP-B binding sites and the order of alphoid monomers might define the folding of alphoid repeats in the centromeric region.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]