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Mol Cell Biol. 1982 June; 2(6): 674-684

Human Cytoplasmic Actin Proteins Are Encoded by a Multigene Family

Joanne Engel, Peter Gunning and Larry Kedes

Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine and Veterans Administration Medical Center, Palo Alto, California 94305

ABSTRACT

We characterized nine human actin genes that we isolated (Engel et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 78:4674-4678, 1981) from a library of cloned human DNA. Measurements of the thermal stability of hybrids formed between each cloned actin gene and {alpha}-, ß-, and {gamma}-actin mRNA demonstrated that only one of the clones is most homologous to sarcomeric actin mRNA, whereas the remaining eight clones are most homologous to cytoplasmic actin mRNA. By the following criteria we show that these nine clones represent nine different actin gene loci rather than different alleles or different parts of a single gene: (i) the restriction enzyme maps of the coding regions are dissimilar; (ii) each clone contains sufficient coding region to encode all or most of an entire actin gene; and (iii) each clone contains sequences homologous to both the 5' and 3' ends of the coding region of a cloned chicken ß-actin cDNA. We conclude, therefore, that the human cytoplasmic actin proteins are encoded by a multigene family.


Mol Cell Biol. 1982 June; 2(6): 674-684




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