In the human paired box-containing (PAX) gene family, only two members, PAX-3 and PAX-6, which are associated with Waardenburg's syndrome and aniridia, respectively have been mapped to human chromosomes. We have now isolated cosmids for six additional human PAX genes (PAX-1,-2,-5,-7,-8,-9) and a polymerase chain reaction fragment for PAX-4. PAX-9 is a novel family member which is closely related in its paired domain to PAX-1. The chromosomal location of all cloned PAX genes was determined by analysis of somatic cell hybrids and (except PAX-4) by fluorescence in situ hybridization to metaphase chromosomes. PAX-1 and PAX-7 map to chromosomal regions containing previously assigned disease loci.
Tumour-induced host-cell transformation has been addressed by examining human tumours in situ and following xenograft to nude mice. We have found evidence for the transformation of host stromal fibroblasts both in vivo and following the introduction of the tumours to in vitro culture. The in vitro culture of one such xenograft--derived from a human prostatic adenocarcinoma--resulted in the outgrowth of a transformed aneuploid mouse cell line. This transformed line was tumourigenic both in BALB/c nu/nu (nude) mice and in heterozygous nu/+mice, with the morphology of a spindle-cell sarcoma. The cell line did not express human isozymes or human histocompatibility antigens, nor were human chromosomes present. Moreover, human DNA sequences were not detected by human Alu repeat sequence element probing in the transformed cell line grown either in vitro or in vivo. The line contained retroviral long terminal repeat sequences but there was no evidence of proviral activation. These findings indicate that tumour cells may cause transformation of neighbouring stromal cells; that this transformation may proceed in the absence of DNA transfer or activation of endogenous proviruses; and that the means of this observed transformation may involve humoral factors elaborated by the tumour cells.
The CD19 gene codes for one of the earliest markers of the human B cell lineage and is a target for the B lymphoid-specific transcription factor BSAP (Pax-5). The transmembrane protein CD19 has been implicated in controlling proliferation of mature B lymphocytes by modulating signal transduction through the antigen receptor. In this study, we have employed Southern blot and fluorescence in situ hybridization analyses to localize the CD19 gene to human chromosome 16p11.
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