Genetic and molecular identification of the end-1 region and the end-1 gene. (A) Genetic map of a portion of the right arm of linkage group (chromosome) V and several deficiencies in the region. The region required for endoderm specification, henceforth called the “EDR,” was delimited by mapping the endpoints of the overlapping deficiencies on the physical map and comparing their intestine differentiation phenotypes. arDf1, yDf8, and yDf9 homozygotes make intestine, whereas nDf42, zuDf2, itDf2, wDf3, and wDf4 homozygotes (labeled in boldface) do not. Based on PCR analysis, itDf2 does not delete sequences including and to the left of the JZ 9,10 primers, which are derived from cm01h10, a cDNA sequence available from ACeDB. wDf4 complements him-5, which is contained in cosmid K02A12, but deletes the sequence amplified by the JZ 17,18 primers, which are derived from the org-1 sequence on the cosmid T08G5. The genomic region required for endoderm specification, which is shown by broken lines, is therefore defined by the left endpoint of itDf2 and the right endpoint of wDf4. We estimate that the interval of the end-1 region is <200 kb. (B) Cosmid clones in the end-1 region. A subset of cosmids in the area was used in the transformation rescue experiments, and three overlapping cosmids (labeled in boldface), K10F6, R7, and T26F2, were found to carry rescuing activity. (C) The location of end-1 was further refined by testing whether subclones derived from K10F6 contained rescuing activity. The ∼4-kb KpnI–SacI genomic fragment indicated by a thicker line was found to be the minimum fragment containing rescuing activity. (□) Exons as deduced by comparing the sequence of the 4-kb rescuing fragment and the nearly full-length 0.85-kb cDNA. (D) The end-1 minigene insert. The insert contains an ∼1.8-kb end-1 upstream genomic sequence and the end-1 cDNA and end-1 3′-untranslated region (UTR) sequences.