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. 1984 Dec 10;259(23):14906-13.

DNA and chromatin structure of the human alpha 1 (I) collagen gene

  • PMID: 6094581
Free article

DNA and chromatin structure of the human alpha 1 (I) collagen gene

G S Barsh et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

The human alpha 1 (I) collagen gene and 48 kilobase pairs of flanking DNA have been isolated on two overlapping cosmids. The alpha 1 (I) gene is 18 kilobase pairs long and contains a single repetitive element of the Alu family; at least 15 repetitive elements are present in the flanking DNA. Analysis of chromatin structure in nuclei isolated from cultured fibroblasts demonstrated a single chromatin domain greater than 65 kilobase pairs in length that contained 9 DNase I-hypersensitive sites. The pattern of hypersensitive sites was also determined in nuclei derived from placental tissue. Five of the DNase I-hypersensitive sites were observed in both placental and fibroblast chromatin including one site near the 5' end and another near the 3' end of alpha 1 (I). An additional two sites located near the 3' end of the alpha 1 (I) gene in fibroblast chromatin are associated with the tissue-specific use of different polyadenylation sites. Two DNase I-hypersensitive sites found only in fibroblast chromatin and one site found only in placental chromatin were located more than 10 kilobase pairs away from the alpha 1 (I) gene and may be related to tissue-specific expression of other genes in the domain. However, the only abundant placental mRNAs from the 65-kilobase pair domain were those transcribed from the alpha 1 (I) gene. These findings suggest that physical linkage does not play a predominant role in controlling coordinate expression of collagen genes.

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