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. 1990 Feb;6(2):238-42.
doi: 10.1016/0888-7543(90)90562-9.

Identification of a closely linked DNA marker, DXS178, to further refine the X-linked agammaglobulinemia locus

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Identification of a closely linked DNA marker, DXS178, to further refine the X-linked agammaglobulinemia locus

S P Kwan et al. Genomics. 1990 Feb.

Abstract

X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA) is an inherited recessive disorder in which the primary defect is not known and the gene product has yet to be identified. Utilizing genetic linkage analysis, we previously localized the XLA gene to the map region of Xq21.3-Xq22 with DNA markers DXS3 and DXS17. In this study, further mapping was performed with two additional DNA probes, DXS94 and DXS178, by means of multipoint analysis of 20 families in which XLA is segregating. Thirteen of these families had been previously analyzed with DXS3 and DXS17. Three crossovers were detected with DXS94 and no recombinations were found between DXS178 and the XLA locus in 9 informative families. Our results show that XLA is closely linked to DXS178 with a two-point lod score of 4.82 and a multipoint lod score of 10.24. Thus, the most likely gene order is DXS3-(XLA,DXS178)-DXS94-DXS17, with the confidence interval for location of XLA lying entirely between DXS3 and DXS94. In 2 of these families, we identified recombinants with DXS17, a locus with which recombination had not previously been detected by others in as many as 40 meiotic events. Furthermore, DXS178 is informative in both of these families and does not show recombination with the disease locus. Therefore, our results indicate that DXS178 is linked tightly to the XLA gene.

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