J. Asakawa et al., Chimerism in humans after intragenic recombination at the haptoglobin locus during early embryogenesis, P NAS US, 96(18), 1999, pp. 10314-10319
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Multidisciplinary
Journal title
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
The human haptoglobin (HP) HP*2 allele contains a 1.7-kilobase (kb) intrage
nic duplication that arose after a unique nonhomologous recombination betwe
en the prototype HP*1 alleles. During a genetic screening of 13,000 childre
n of survivors exposed to atomic-bomb radiation and 10,000 children of unex
posed persons, two children suspected of carrying de novo mutations at the
haptoglobin locus were identified (one in each group). DNA analyses of sing
le-cell-derived colonies of Epstein-Barr virus-transformed B cells revealed
that the two children were mosaics comprising HP*2/HP*2 and HP*2/HP*1 cell
s at a ratio of approximate to 3:1, We infer that the latter cells are caus
ed by reversion of one HP*2 allele to HP*1 through an intramolecular homolo
gous recombination between the duplicated segments of the Hp*2 allele that
excised one of the segments. Because the mosaicism is substantial (approxim
ate to 25%), this recombination must have occurred in early embryogenesis,
The frequency of finding these children and the extent of their mosaicisms
corresponds to an HP*2 to HP*1 reversion rate of 8 x 10(-6) per cell during
development. This leads to the prediction that the HP*1 allele also will b
e represented, although usually at a very low frequency, in any HP2-2 perso
n. We tested this prediction by using PCR for a single individual and found
the HP*1 allele at frequencies of 4 x 10(-6) and 3 x 10(-6) in somatic and
sperm cells. The HP*1 allele was detected by PCR in all four other HP2-2 i
ndividuals, which supports the regular but rare occurrence somatically of h
omologous recombination within duplicated regions in humans, in agreement w
ith previous observations in mouse and Drosophila.