Shirley V. Cheng
Harvard University
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Featured researches published by Shirley V. Cheng.
Cell | 1987
T. Conrad Gilliam; Rudolph E. Tanzi; Jonathan L. Haines; Tom I. Bonner; Ann G. Faryniarz; Wendy Hobbs; Marcy E. MacDonald; Shirley V. Cheng; Susan E. Folstein; P. Michael Conneally; Nancy S. Wexler; James F. Gusella
Huntingtons disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder of late onset, characterized by progressive motor disturbance, psychological manifestations, and intellectual deterioration. The HD gene has been genetically mapped by linkage to the DNA marker D4S10, but the exact physical location of the HD defect has remained uncertain. To delineate critical recombination events revealing the physical position of the HD gene, we have identified restriction fragment length polymorphisms for two recently mapped chromosome 4 loci, RAF2 and D4S62, and determined the pattern of segregation of these markers in both reference and HD pedigrees. Multipoint linkage analysis of the new markers with D4S10 and HD establishes that the HD gene is located in a very small physical region at the tip of the chromosome, bordered by D4S10 and the telomere. A crossover within the D4S10 locus orients this segment on the chromosome, providing the necessary information for efficient application of directional cloning strategies for progressing toward, and eventually isolating, the HD gene.
Neuron | 1989
Marcy E. MacDonald; Jonathan L. Haines; Michael Zimmer; Shirley V. Cheng; Sandra Youngman; W.Lance Whaley; Nancy S. Wexler; Maja Bucan; Bernice Allitto; Barbara Smith; Julie Leavitt; Annemarie Poustka; Peter S. Harper; Hans Lehrach; John J. Wasmuth; Anna Marie Frischauf; James F. Gusella
The Huntingtons disease gene (HD) maps distal to the D4S10 marker in the terminal 4p16.3 subband of chromosome 4. Directed cloning has provided several DNA segments that have been grouped into three clusters on a physical map of approximately 5 X 10(6) bp in 4p16.3. We have typed RFLPs in both reference and HD pedigrees to produce a fine-structure genetic map that establishes the relative order of the clusters and further narrows the target area containing the HD gene. Despite the large number of meiotic events examined, the HD gene cannot be positioned relative to the most distal cluster. One recombination event with HD suggests that the terminal-most markers flank the disease gene; two others favor a telomeric location for the defect. Efforts to isolate the HD gene must be divided between these two distinct intervals until additional genetic data resolve the apparent contradiction in localization.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1989
Marcy E. MacDonald; Shirley V. Cheng; Michael Zimmer; Jonathan L. Haines; A. Poustka; Bernice Allitto; Barbara L. Smith; William L. Whaley; Donna M. Romano; J Jagadeesh
Five highly informative multiallele restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) of value for preclinical diagnosis of Huntingtons disease (HD) have been genetically characterized. One RFLP was uncovered by expansion of the D4S43 locus while three others are at D4S111 and D4S115, loci defined by NotI-linking clones. The final marker, D4S125, represents a recently discovered VNTR locus. All four loci map closer to the HD gene and to the telomere than D4S10, the original linked marker for HD. In combination with two multiallele RFLPs previously identified for D4S43 and another linked locus, D4S95, these five new multiallele markers will dramatically improve the speed and accuracy of predictive testing in HD, and increase its applicability by maximizing the chances of an informative test for anyone with appropriate family structure.
Somatic Cell and Molecular Genetics | 1991
William L. Whaley; Gillian P. Bates; Andrea Novelletto; Zdenek Sedlacek; Shirley V. Cheng; Donna M. Romano; Elizabeth Ormondroyd; Bernice Allitto; Carol Lin; Sandra Youngman; Sarah Baxendale; Maja Bucan; Michael R. Altherr; John J. Wasmuth; Nancy S. Wexler; Marina Frontali; Anne-Marie Frischauf; Hans Lehrach; Marcy E. MacDonald; James F. Gusella
Huntingtons disease (HD) is tightly linked to genetic markers in 4p16.3. We have used a regional somatic cell hybrid mapping panel to isolate and map 25 cosmids to the proximal portion of 4p16.3 and 17 cosmids to the distal portion. The latter were positioned by long-range restriction mapping relative to previously mapped markers. One cosmid, L6 (D4S166), spans the critical breakpoint in the mapping panel that distinguishes proximal and distal 4p16.3. Four of the cosmids mapped distal toD4S90, the previous terminal marker on 4p, and stretched to within 75 kb of the telomere. Several of the cosmids that mapped between L6 andD4S90 were clustered near a number of previously isolated clones in a region with many NotI sites. Cosmid E4 (D4S168) was localized immediately proximal to the one remaining gap in the long-range restriction map of distal 4p16.3. Although pulsed field gel mapping with E4 failed to link the two segments of the map, the intervening gap was excluded as a potential site for theHD gene by genetic analysis.
Genomics | 1988
N. Sacchi; Shirley V. Cheng; Rudolph E. Tanzi; James F. Gusella; Harry A. Drabkin; David Patterson; J.H. Haines; T.S. Papas
The definition of the genetic linkage map of human chromosomes may be helpful in the analysis of cancer-specific chromosome abnormalities. In the translocation (8;21)(q22;q22), a nonrandom cytogenetic abnormality of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), we previously observed the transposition of the ETS2 gene located at the 21q22 region from chromosome 21 to chromosome 8. However, no ETS2 rearrangements were detected in the DNA of t(8;21)-positive AML cells. Genetic linkage analysis has allowed us to locate the ETS2 gene relative to other loci and to establish that the breakpoint is at an approximate genetic distance of 17 cM from ETS2. When the information from the linkage map is combined with that from molecular studies, it is apparent that (a) the t(8;21) breakpoint does not affect the ETS2 gene structure or the structure of the other four loci proximal to ETS2: D21S55, D21S57, D21S17, and ERG, and ETS-related gene; and (b) the actual DNA sequence involved in the t(8;21) must reside in a 3-cM genetic region between the D21S58 and the D21S55/D21S57 loci, and remains to be identified.
Genomics | 1989
Shirley V. Cheng; Gail R. Martin; Joseph H. Nadeau; Jonathan L. Haines; Maja Bucan; Christine A. Kozak; Marcy E. MacDonald; Jean L. Lockyer; Fred D. Ledley; Savio L. C. Woo; Hans Lehrach; T. Conrad Gilliam; James F. Gusella
Comparative mapping in man and mouse has revealed frequent conservation of chromosomal segments, offering a potential approach to human disease genes via their murine homologs. Using DNA markers near the Huntington disease gene on the short arm of chromosome 4, we defined a conserved linkage group on mouse chromosome 5. Linkage analyses using recombinant inbred strains, a standard outcross, and an interspecific backcross were used to assign homologs for five human loci, D4S43, D4S62, QDPR, D4S76, and D4S80, to chromosome 5 and to determine their relationships with previously mapped markers for this autosome. The relative order of the conserved loci was preserved in a linkage group that spanned 13% recombination in the interspecific backcross analysis. The most proximal of the conserved markers on the mouse map, D4S43h, showed no recombination with Emv-1, an endogenous ecotropic virus, in 84 outcross progeny and 19 recombinant inbred strains. Hx, a dominant mutation that causes deformities in limb development, maps approximately 2 cM proximal to Emv-1. Since the human D4S43 locus is less than 1 cM proximal to HD near the telomere of chromosome 4, the murine counterpart of the HD gene might lie between Hx and Emv-1 or D4S43h. Cloning of the region between these markers could generate new probes for conserved human sequences in the vicinity of the HD gene or possibly candidates for the murine counterpart of this human disease locus.
Journal of Medical Genetics | 1986
Paul C. Watkins; Rudolph E. Tanzi; Shirley V. Cheng; James F. Gusella
Chromosome 21 is the smallest autosome, comprising only about 1.9% of human DNA, but represents one of the most intensively studied regions of the genome. Much of the interest in chromosome 21 can be attributed to its association with Downs syndrome, a genetic disorder that afflicts one in every 700 to 1000 newborns. Although only 17 genes have been assigned to chromosome 21, a very large number of cloned DNA segments of unknown function have been isolated and regionally mapped. The majority of these segments detect restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) and therefore represent useful genetic markers. Continued molecular genetic investigation of chromosome 21 will be central to elucidating molecular events leading to meiotic non-disjunction and consequent trisomy, the contribution of specific genes to the pathology of Downs syndrome, and the possible role of chromosome 21 in Alzheimers disease and other as yet unmapped genetic defects.
Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology | 1986
James F. Gusella; Gilliam Tc; Rudolph E. Tanzi; Marcy E. MacDonald; Shirley V. Cheng; Margaret R. Wallace; Jonathan L. Haines; P.M. Conneally; Nancy S. Wexler
The discovery of a DNA marker linked to the HD gene has provided new avenues into the investigation of this devastating disorder. Genetic investigations have determined that in most and possibly all HD families, the disease is caused by a defect that maps near the telomere on the short arm of chromosome 4. DNA markers will soon provide presymptomatic diagnosis for this disorder, but this increased capability may be a mixed blessing in the absence of effective treatment. The most hopeful route to developing such treatment lies in cloning and characterization of the primary defect. Precise genetic and physical mapping using DNA markers and improvements in techniques for analyzing large segments of DNA have set the stage for cloning of the disease gene in the near future. It will undoubtedly reveal an interesting mechanism for complete phenotypic dominance in man for comparison with completely dominant mutations in other species, particularly Drosophila. The nature of the defect may provide new insights into the functional organization of the central nervous system. For the sake of the many individuals who are afflicted by HD or who are asymptomatic gene carriers, it is to be hoped that cloning and characterizing the disease gene will also yield the necessary information to develop an effective therapy.
Mammalian Genome | 1992
Christine Ambrose; Shirley V. Cheng; Bertrand Fontaine; Joseph H. Nadeau; Marcy E. MacDonald; James F. Gusella
Recent evidence suggests that the human neuromuscular disorders, hyperkalemic periodic paralysis and paramyotonia congenita, are both caused by genetic defects in the α-subunit of the adult skeletal muscle sodium channel, which maps near the growth hormone cluster (GH) on Chromosome (Chr) 17q. In view of the extensive homology between this human chromosome and mouse Chr 11, we typed an interspecies backcross to determine whether the murine homolog (Scn4a) of this sodium channel gene mapped within the conserved chromosomal segment. The cytosolic thymidine kinase gene, Tk-1, was also positioned on the genetic map of Chr 11. Both Scn4a and Tk-1 showed clear linkage to mouse Chr 11 loci previously typed in this backcross, yielding the map order: TrJ-(Re, Hox-2, Krt-1)-Scn4a-Tk-1. No mouse mutant that could be considered a model of either hyperkalemic periodic paralysis or paramyotonia congenita has been mapped to the appropriate region of mouse Chr 11. These data incorporate an additional locus into the already considerable degree of homology observed for these human and mouse chromosomes. These data are also consistent with the view that the conserved segment region may extend to the telomere on mouse Chr 11 and on human 17q.
Mammalian Genome | 1992
Vijaya Ramesh; Shirley V. Cheng; Christine A. Kozak; Bruce J. Herron; Vivian E. Shih; Benjamin A. Taylor; James F. Gusella
Ornithine aminotransferase (OAT), a mitochondrial matrix enzyme, is deficient in patients with gyrate atrophy of the choroid and retina. In human, the OAT structural gene maps to Chromosome (Chr) 10q26 and several OAT-related sequences, some of which are known to be processed pseudogenes, which map to Xp11.3–11.21. Here, we report chromosomal localization in the mouse of the OAT gene and related sequences. Genomic DNA blot analysis of a well-characterized panel of Chinese hamster x mouse somatic cell hybrids using a human OAT probe revealed two murine loci, one on mouse Chr 7 and the other on Chr X. In addition, segregation of restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) detected by the OAT probe in recombinant inbred (RI) strains detected a third locus on Chr 3 and positioned the X locus near Cf-8 and Rsvp. Progeny of an intersubspecific backcross were used to map the Chr 7 locus between Tyr and Int-2, near Cyp2e-1.