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    Gene. 1989 Dec 7;84(1):105-13.

    Structure of the human lck gene: differences in genomic organisation within src-related genes affect only N-terminal exons.

    Rouer E, Van Huynh T, Lavareda de Souza S, Lang MC, Fischer S, Benarous R.

    Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM U15), Paris, France.

    Although cDNA sequences coding for several Rous sarcoma virus Src-related protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) have been reported for several years, knowledge of the structure and organisation of genes of the src family is still limited. In this work, a detailed structure and organisation of the human lck gene is reported. A 17-kb genomic clone encoding human p56 Lck, a lymphocyte-specific PTK of the Src-related subfamily, has been isolated. The human lck gene is organized in 13 exons, one more than in the human cellular (c)-src gene. The twelve coding exons are located in this clone, whereas the putative 5'-noncoding exon is probably located very far upstream from the second exon. Splicing sites for exons 4 to 12, which encode both conserved phospholipase-C-like and catalytic domains of the Src-like PTKs, arise exactly at the same position for the human lck, human c-src and c-fgr genes. The only differences concern the splice sites of exons 1' and 2, which encode the unique N-terminal domain of human Lck. These results give further evidence that the different PTKs of the Src-like family have probably evolved through the mechanism of exon shuffling.

    PMID: 2558056 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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