The chromosome region containing the highly polymorphic HLA class I genes displays limited large scale variability in the human population.

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RESUMO

The large-scale organization and polymorphism of the HLA class I region was investigated by pulsed field gel (PFG) fractionation of DNA from various HLA-typed cell lines cleaved by different 'rare cutter' restriction enzymes, followed by hybridization with 'general' and locus-specific HLA probes. Results indicate that (i) most HLA class I sequences are contained in a 340 kb MluI DNA fragment which also carries the HLA-A gene; (ii) HLA-A, -B and -C genes are present on different fragments bounded by 'HTF islands' (CpG-rich, unmethylated DNA regions containing multiple sites for 'rare cutter' enzymes) which generally coincide with the 5' regions of expressed genes; and (iii) very little fragment size polymorphism is seen, implying that expansion/contraction events in the HLA class I region due to unequal crossing over (as documented in the mouse class I system) are infrequently found in the human population.

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