Human chromosome 11 complements ataxia-telangiectasia cells but does not complement the defect in AT-like Chinese hamster cell mutants

Abstract
It has been shown that the X-ray-sensitive Chinese hamster V79 mutants (V-E5, V-C4 and V-G8) are similar to ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) cells. To determine whether the AT-like rodent cell mutants are defective in the gene homologous to A-T (group A, C or D), human chromosome 11 was introduced to the V-E5 and V-G8 mutant cells by microcell-mediated chromosome transfer. Forty independent hybrid clones were obtained in which the presence of chromosome 11 was determined by in situ hybridization. The presence of the region of chromosome 11q22–23 was shown by molecular analysis using polymorphic DNA markers specific for the ATA, ATC and ATD loci. Seventeen of the obtained monochromosomal Chinese hamster hybrids contained a cytogenetically normal human chromosome 11, but only twelve hybrid cell lines were shown to contain an intact 11q22–23 region. Despite the complementation of the X-ray sensitivity by a normal chromosome 11 introduced to A-T cells (complementation group D), these twelve Chinese hamster hybrid clones showed lack of complementation of X-ray and streptonigrin hypersensitivity. The observed lack of complementation does not seem to be attributable to hypermethylation of the human chromosome 11 in the rodent cell background, since 5-azacytidine treatment had no effect on the streptonigrin hypersensitivity of the hybrid cell lines. These results indicate that the gene defective in the AT-like rodent cell mutants is not homologous to the ATA, ATC or ATD genes and that the human gene complementing the defect in the AT-like mutants seems not to be located on human chromosome 11.

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