Characterization of a candidate bcl-1 gene.

D A Withers(University of California, San Francisco), Richard C. Harvey(University of California, San Francisco), John B. Faust(University of California, San Francisco), O.O. Melnyk(University of California, San Francisco), Kate A. Carey(University of California, San Francisco), T C Meeker(University of California, San Francisco)
Molecular and Cellular Biology
October 1, 1991
Cited by 344Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The t(11;14)(q13;q32) translocation has been associated with human B-lymphocytic malignancy. Several examples of this translocation have been cloned, documenting that this abnormality joins the immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene to the bcl-1 locus on chromosome 11. However, the identification of the bcl-1 gene, a putative dominant oncogene, has been elusive. In this work, we have isolated genomic clones covering 120 kb of the bcl-1 locus. Probes from the region of an HpaII-tiny-fragment island identified a candidate bcl-1 gene. cDNAs representing the bcl-1 mRNA were cloned from three cell lines, two with the translocation. The deduced amino acid sequence from these clones showed bcl-1 to be a member of the cyclin gene family. In addition, our analysis of expression of bcl-1 in an extensive panel of human cell lines showed it to be widely expressed except in lymphoid or myeloid lineages. This observation may provide a molecular basis for distinct modes of cell cycle control in different mammalian tissues. Activation of the bcl-1 gene may be oncogenic by directly altering progression through the cell cycle.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis