Feline adult beta-globin polymorphism reflected in restriction fragment length patterns
1999
Kohn, B. | Henthorn, P.S. | Rajpurohit, Y. | Reilly, M.P. | Asakura, T. | Giger, U.
Adult domestic cats (Felis catus) appear to have the most polymorphic-globin system of any species. Reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) revealed one alpha-chain and six different beta-globin chains. Each cat may have one to four different beta-globins, and a total of 17 different beta-globin patterns were identified. Based on family studies, a beta-globin gene region with two linked beta-globin gene loci and two to five alleles was proposed. In order to further define the molecular basis of this polymorphism we performed Southern blot analysis of the beta-globin gene region from 25 cats with 13 different HPLC patterns. Genomic DNA was digested with five restriction endonucleases (BamHI, BglII, EcoRI, HindIII, and PstI) and blots were hybridized with a human beta-globin probe. Restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) with one to five fragments of 2.2-23 kb in size were found with BglII, EcoRI, HindIII, and PstI. Cats with specific HPLC beta-globin patterns had a unique DNA restriction pattern. The similarly sized BamHI and HindIII fragments of 4.6 kb suggest the presence of two closely linked genes. Furthermore, family studies suggest an autosomal codominant mode of inheritance of the beta-globin chains with seven haplotypes. Thus the RFLP data analyzed in the context of the HPLC haplotypes provide evidence at the DNA level for a feline beta-globin gene region with two closely linked gene loci and two to five alleles.
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