Cloning, expression, and chromosomal localization to 11p12-13 of a human LIM/homeobox gene, hLim-1.
We have identified a putative transcription factor, designated hLim-1, from human fetal brain using degenerate polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and cDNA library screening. The deduced open reading frame, derived from sequencing a 3.0-kb hLim-1 cDNA, encodes a protein of 384 amino acids with two cysteine-rich LIM domains and one homeobox (HOX) DNA-binding domain. The nucleotide sequence of hLim-1 cDNA is 87% identical to mouse Lim-1 and the predicted amino acid sequence is greater than 97% conserved. Expression patterns of hLim-1 were evaluated by Northern analysis and reverse transcription (RT)-PCR coupled with Southern blotting. HLim-1 expression was observed in human brain, thymus, and tonsillar tissue. Expression of hLim-1 was also observed in 58% of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) cell lines and in four of five primary samples from patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in myeloid blast transformation. The gene encoding hLim-1 was mapped using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to human chromosome 11p12-13. The expression pattern and structural characteristics of the hLim-1 gene suggest that it encodes a transcriptional regulatory protein involved in the control of differentiation and development of neural and lymphoid cells. Its expression in CML in blast crisis suggests that it may be involved with progression in this disease; a prospective study is required to confirm this.