| Literature DB >> 9177780 |
R H Giles1, F Petrij, H G Dauwerse, A I den Hollander, T Lushnikova, G J van Ommen, R H Goodman, L L Deaven, N A Doggett, D J Peters, M H Breuning.
Abstract
In the interest of cloning and analyzing the genes responsible for two very different diseases, the Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome (RTS) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) associated with the somatic translocation t(8;16)(p11;p13.3), we constructed a high-resolution restriction map of contiguous cosmids (contig) covering 1.2 Mb of chromosome 16p13.3. By fluorescence in situ hybridization and Southern blot analysis, we assigned all tested RTS and t(8;16) translocation breakpoints to a 100-kb region. We have previously reported exact physical locations of these 16p breakpoints, which all disrupt one gene we mapped to this interval: the CREB-binding protein (CBP or CREBBP) gene. Intriguingly, mutations in the CBP gene are responsible for RTS as well as the t(8;16)-associated AML. CBP functions as an integrator in the assembly of various multiprotein regulatory complexes and is thus necessary for transcription in a broad range of transduction pathways. We report here the cloning, physical mapping, characterization, and full cDNA nucleotide sequence of the human CBP gene.Entities:
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Year: 1997 PMID: 9177780 DOI: 10.1006/geno.1997.4699
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genomics ISSN: 0888-7543 Impact factor: 5.736