Abstract

Hybridization with an oligonucleotide array was used to map the regions of DNA anchorage to the nuclear matrix. Matrix-associated DNA served as a hybridization probe. To obtain the oligonucleotide array, 60-mer oligonucleotides regularly distributed throughout the genome region of interest at 2-kb intervals were immobilized on a nylon filter. The organization of DNA into loop domains was studied in a 100-kb region of chicken chromosome 16, including the α -globin gene cluster. A 40-kb DNA loop, which was fixed to the nuclear matrix and harbored all α-globin genes, was observed in erythroid cells. One of its anchorage regions colocalized with matrix associated region (MAR) and an insulator found previously in the 5′ region of the chicken α-globin gene domain. The spatial (domain-loop) organization of the α-globin gene cluster in lymphoid cells proved to be strikingly different from that in erythroid cells.

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