Physical mapping and characterization of the equine lymphocyte antigen (ELA) complex

The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is a genomic region comprised of a linked cluster of genes and gene families that play an important role in both the adaptive and innate immune responses. Genes within the MHC have also been associated with susceptibility and/or resistance to certain diseas...

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Main Author: Seabury, Ashley Gustafson
Other Authors: Skow, Loren C.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2005
Subjects:
MHC
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/2345
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-23452013-01-08T10:37:48ZPhysical mapping and characterization of the equine lymphocyte antigen (ELA) complexSeabury, Ashley GustafsonMHChorseThe major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is a genomic region comprised of a linked cluster of genes and gene families that play an important role in both the adaptive and innate immune responses. Genes within the MHC have also been associated with susceptibility and/or resistance to certain diseases, such as haemochromatosis, insulindependent diabetes, and psoriasis. As a result of these associations the MHC is one the most extensively studied regions of the mammalian genome. The MHCs of a wide variety of species, such as human (HLA), mouse (H-2), pig (SLA), and cow (BoLA), have been characterized with respect to gene content, genomic organization of class I, class II, and class III regions, and comparative organization. Comparative analyses have been useful in delineating the evolutionary development of the MHC. While the MHC of many mammalian species has been investigated, little research has been performed on the equine (Equus caballus) MHC. The equine MHC is referred to as the equine lymphocyte antigen (ELA) complex and is located on chromosome ECA20q. The research that has been done on ELA focused on identifying gene copy number and genetic polymorphisms in the classical class I and class II genes. To better characterize the gene content and organization of ELA, we isolated 103 bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones from a horse BAC library containing well conserved genes found within mammalian MHCs. These BAC clones were assembled into two sequence-ready ordered contigs that span the ELA complex. The first contig which has a minimum tiling path of nine BAC clones contains the ELA class II region and spans 800 kb. The class I and III regions are contained within the second contig which has a 14 BAC clone minimum tiling path and spans 1.6 Mb. This study will report on the construction of the two BAC contigs which span the ELA complex, and characterization of the gene content and organization of the ELA complex.Texas A&M UniversitySkow, Loren C.2005-08-29T14:39:19Z2005-08-29T14:39:19Z2006-052005-08-29T14:39:19ZBookThesisElectronic Dissertationtext1014152 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/2345en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic MHC
horse
spellingShingle MHC
horse
Seabury, Ashley Gustafson
Physical mapping and characterization of the equine lymphocyte antigen (ELA) complex
description The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is a genomic region comprised of a linked cluster of genes and gene families that play an important role in both the adaptive and innate immune responses. Genes within the MHC have also been associated with susceptibility and/or resistance to certain diseases, such as haemochromatosis, insulindependent diabetes, and psoriasis. As a result of these associations the MHC is one the most extensively studied regions of the mammalian genome. The MHCs of a wide variety of species, such as human (HLA), mouse (H-2), pig (SLA), and cow (BoLA), have been characterized with respect to gene content, genomic organization of class I, class II, and class III regions, and comparative organization. Comparative analyses have been useful in delineating the evolutionary development of the MHC. While the MHC of many mammalian species has been investigated, little research has been performed on the equine (Equus caballus) MHC. The equine MHC is referred to as the equine lymphocyte antigen (ELA) complex and is located on chromosome ECA20q. The research that has been done on ELA focused on identifying gene copy number and genetic polymorphisms in the classical class I and class II genes. To better characterize the gene content and organization of ELA, we isolated 103 bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones from a horse BAC library containing well conserved genes found within mammalian MHCs. These BAC clones were assembled into two sequence-ready ordered contigs that span the ELA complex. The first contig which has a minimum tiling path of nine BAC clones contains the ELA class II region and spans 800 kb. The class I and III regions are contained within the second contig which has a 14 BAC clone minimum tiling path and spans 1.6 Mb. This study will report on the construction of the two BAC contigs which span the ELA complex, and characterization of the gene content and organization of the ELA complex.
author2 Skow, Loren C.
author_facet Skow, Loren C.
Seabury, Ashley Gustafson
author Seabury, Ashley Gustafson
author_sort Seabury, Ashley Gustafson
title Physical mapping and characterization of the equine lymphocyte antigen (ELA) complex
title_short Physical mapping and characterization of the equine lymphocyte antigen (ELA) complex
title_full Physical mapping and characterization of the equine lymphocyte antigen (ELA) complex
title_fullStr Physical mapping and characterization of the equine lymphocyte antigen (ELA) complex
title_full_unstemmed Physical mapping and characterization of the equine lymphocyte antigen (ELA) complex
title_sort physical mapping and characterization of the equine lymphocyte antigen (ela) complex
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/2345
work_keys_str_mv AT seaburyashleygustafson physicalmappingandcharacterizationoftheequinelymphocyteantigenelacomplex
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