1. Data characterizing the genomic structure of the T cell receptor (TRB) locus in Camelus dromedarius
- Author
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Vito Castelli, Rachele Antonacci, Mariagrazia Bellini, Serafina Massari, Salvatrice Ciccarese, Antonacci, Rachele, Bellini, Mariagrazia, Castelli, Vito, Ciccarese, Salvatrice, and Massari, Serafina
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Locus (genetics) ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,Ruminantia ,Camelus dromedarius ,Dromedary genome ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,T-Cell Receptor Beta Chain ,lcsh:Science (General) ,Gene ,Genomic organization ,Genetics ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,T-cell receptor ,Suina ,biology.organism_classification ,Tylopoda ,IMGT ,030104 developmental biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,Camelus dromedariu ,T cell receptor ,TRB locus ,lcsh:Q1-390 - Abstract
These data are presented in support of structural and evolutionary analysis of the published article entitled "The occurrence of three D-J-C clusters within the dromedary TRB locus highlights a shared evolution in Tylopoda, Ruminantia and Suina" (Antonacci et al., 2017) [1]. Here we describe the genomic structure and the gene content of the T cell receptor beta chain (TRB) locus in Camelus dromedarius. As in the other species of mammals, the general genomic organization of the dromedary TRB locus consists of a pool of TRBV genes located upstream of in tandem TRBD-J-C clusters, followed by a TRBV gene with an inverted transcriptional orientation. A peculiarity of the dromedary TRB locus structure is the presence of three TRBD-J-C clusters, which is a common feature of sheep, cattle and pig sequences.
- Published
- 2017