J.K. Nancarrow
Boston Children's Hospital
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Featured researches published by J.K. Nancarrow.
Genomics | 1992
David F. Callen; Norman A. Doggett; Raymond L. Stallings; L.Z. Chen; Scott A. Whitmore; S.A. Lane; J.K. Nancarrow; Sinoula Apostolou; A.D. Thompson; Naras M. Lapsys; Helen J. Eyre; Elizabeth Baker; Y. Shen; K. Holman; Hilary A. Phillips; Robert I. Richards; G.R. Sutherland
A panel of 54 mouse/human somatic cell hybrids, each possessing various portions of chromosome 16, was constructed; 46 were constructed from naturally occurring rearrangements of this chromosome, which were ascertained in clinical cytogenetics laboratories, and a further 8 from rearrangements spontaneously arising during tissue culture. By mapping 235 DNA markers to this panel of hybrids, and in relation to four fragile sites and the centromere, a cytogenetic-based physical map of chromosome 16 with an average resolution of 1.6 Mb was generated. Included are 66 DNA markers that have been typed in the CEPH pedigrees, and these will allow the construction of a detailed correlation of the cytogenetic-based physical map and the genetic map of this chromosome. Cosmids from chromosome 16 that have been assembled into contigs by use of repetitive sequence fingerprinting have been mapped to the hybrid panel. Approximately 11% of the euchromatin is now both represented in such contigs and located on the cytogenetic-based physical map. This high-resolution cytogenetic-based physical map of chromosome 16 will provide the basis for the cloning of genetically mapped disease genes, genes disrupted in cytogenetic rearrangements that have produced abnormal phenotypes, and cancer breakpoints.
Genomics | 1992
Raymond L. Stallings; Norman A. Doggett; David F. Callen; Sinoula Apostolou; L.Zhong Chen; J.K. Nancarrow; Scott A. Whitmore; Peter J. F. Harris; Hannah Michison; Martijn H. Breuning; Jasper J. Saris; James W. Fickett; Michael J. Cinkosky; David C. Torney; Carl E. Hildebrand; Robert K. Moyzis
A cosmid contig physical map of human chromosome 16 has been developed by repetitive sequence finger-printing of approximately 4000 cosmid clones obtained from a chromosome 16-specific cosmid library. The arrangement of clones in contigs is determined by (1) estimating cosmid length and determining the likelihoods for all possible pairwise clone overlaps, using the fingerprint data, and (2) using an optimization technique to fit contig maps to these estimates. Two important questions concerning this contig map are how much of chromosome 16 is covered and how accurate are the assembled contigs. Both questions can be addressed by hybridization of single-copy sequence probes to gridded arrays of the cosmids. All of the fingerprinted clones have been arrayed on nylon membranes so that any region of interest can be identified by hybridization. The hybridization experiments indicate that approximately 84% of the euchromatic arms of chromosome 16 are covered by contigs and singleton cosmids. Both grid hybridization (26 contigs) and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis experiments (11 contigs) confirmed the assembled contigs, indicating that false positive overlaps occur infrequently in the present map. Furthermore, regional localization of 93 contigs and singleton cosmids to a somatic cell hybrid mapping panel indicates that there is no bias in the coverage of the euchromatic arms.
Genomics | 1991
Graeme Suthers; I. Oberlé; J.K. Nancarrow; John C. Mulley; V.J. Hyland; P.J. Wilson; J. McCure; C.P. Morris; J.J. Hopwood; J.L. Mandel; G.R. Sutherland
The development of the human gene map in the region of the fragile X mutation (FRAXA) at Xq27 has been hampered by a lack of closely linked polymorphic loci. The polymorphic loci DXS369 (detected by probe RN1), DXS296 (VK21A, VK21C), and DXS304 (U6.2) have recently been mapped to within 5 cM of FRAXA. The order of loci near FRAXA has been defined on the basis of physical mapping studies as cen-F9-DXS105-DXS98-DXS369-DXS297-FRAXA-++ +DXS296-IDS-DXS304-DXS52-qter. The probe VK23B detected HindIII and XmnI restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) at DXS297 with heterozygote frequencies of 0.34 and 0.49, respectively. An IDS cDNA probe, pc2S15, detected StuI and TaqI RFLPs at IDS with heterozygote frequencies of 0.50 and 0.08, respectively. Multipoint linkage analysis of these polymorphic loci in normal pedigrees indicated that the locus order was F9-(DXS105, DXS98)-(DXS369, DXS297)-(DXS293,IDS)-DXS304-DXS52. The recombination fractions between adjacent loci were F9-(0.058)-DXS105-(0.039)-DXS98-(0.123)-DXS369-(0.00)- DXS297-(0.057)-DXS296- (0.00)-IDS-(0.012)-DXS304-(0.120)-DXS52. This genetic map will provide the basis for further linkage studies of both the fragile X syndrome and other disorders mapped to Xq27-q28.
Genomics | 1991
L.Z. Chen; Peter C. Harris; Sinoula Apostolou; Elizabeth Baker; K. Holman; S.A. Lane; J.K. Nancarrow; Scott A. Whitmore; Raymond L. Stallings; Carl E. Hildebrand; Robert I. Richards; G.R. Sutherland; David F. Callen
Mapping of 33 anonymous DNA probes and 12 genes to the long arm of chromosome 16 was achieved by the use of 14 mouse/human hybrid cell lines and the fragile site FRA16B. Two of the hybrid cell lines contained overlapping interstitial deletions in bands q21 and q22.1. The localization of the 12 genes has been refined. The breakpoints present in the hybrids, in conjunction with the fragile site, can potentially divide the long arm of chromosome 16 into 16 regions. However, this was reduced to 14 regions because in two instances there were no probes or genes that mapped between pairs of breakpoints.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2000
Karin Ried; Merran Finnis; Lynne Hobson; Marie Mangelsdorf; Sonia Dayan; J.K. Nancarrow; Erica Woollatt; Gabriel Kremmidiotis; Alison Gardner; Deon J. Venter; Elizabeth Baker; Robert I. Richards
Cancer Research | 2000
Marie Mangelsdorf; Karin Ried; Erica Woollatt; Sonia Dayan; Helen J. Eyre; Merran Finnis; Lynne Hobson; J.K. Nancarrow; Deon J. Venter; Elizabeth Baker; Robert I. Richards
Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2000
Li Cai; Berthold Struk; Mark D. Adams; Wan Ji; Thomas Haaf; Hyung-Lyun Kang; So Hee Dho; Xuequn Xu; Franziska Ringpfeil; J.K. Nancarrow; Stéphanie Zäch; Lori Schaen; Markus Stumm; Tianhua Niu; Joon Chung; Karsten Lunze; Bradford Verrecchia; Lowell A. Goldsmith; Denis Viljoen; Luis E. Figuera; Wayne Fuchs; Mark Lebwohl; Jouni Uitto; Robert I. Richards; Daniel Hohl; Raj Ramesar; David F. Callen; Ung-Jin Kim; Norman A. Doggett; Kenneth H. Neldner
Human Molecular Genetics | 1995
J.K. Nancarrow; K. Holman; Marie Mangelsdorf; Tada-aki Hori; M. Denton; G.R. Sutherland; Robert I. Richards
Archive | 2000
Robert I. Richards; Karin Ried; Merran Finnis; Lynne Hobson; Marie Mangelsdorf; Sonia Dayan; J.K. Nancarrow; Erica Woollatt; Elizabeth Baker
Genomics | 1994
Scott A. Whitmore; Sinoula Apostolou; S.A. Lane; J.K. Nancarrow; Hilary A. Phillips; Robert I. Richards; G.R. Sutherland; David F. Callen