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Comparative Study
. 1988 Jul;1(5):367-76.
doi: 10.1016/0896-6273(88)90186-9.

A Purkinje cell differentiation marker shows a partial DNA sequence homology to the cellular sis/PDGF2 gene

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Comparative Study

A Purkinje cell differentiation marker shows a partial DNA sequence homology to the cellular sis/PDGF2 gene

J Oberdick et al. Neuron. 1988 Jul.

Erratum in

  • Neuron 1989 Sep;3(3):following 385

Abstract

To search for genes involved in determining the morphology of individual neuronal types, a cDNA library was constructed from postnatal day 13 mouse cerebellum. From this library, 2 clones, L7 and L19, were isolated by a differential hybridization procedure and shown by in situ hybridization to be Purkinje cell-specific within the cerebellum. Both RNAs appear between postnatal days 4 and 8 and continue into adulthood, coinciding with terminal differentiation of the Purkinje cells. L7 seems to be expressed exclusively in the cerebellum, whereas L19 is expressed throughout the brain. Consistent with the RNA localization, L7 protein is found only in the cerebellum and is confined to the Purkinje cells. The L7 amino acid sequence has been deduced from the cDNA sequence, and a pseudo-repeat within the L7 protein sequence is homologous to the amino acids sequence in the primary translation product of the gene for human sis/PDGF.

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