Orientation of the Friedreich’s ataxia locus (FRDA) with respect to D9S15 and D9S5 has proved critical to the design of subsequent cloning strategies. The rarity of recombination events between FRDA and these markers, originally used to determine assignment to human chromosome region 9q13→q21.1 has necessitated the instigation of physical mapping studies to determine order and, hence, the precise location of the disease gene. Simultaneous fluorescence in situ hybridisation using cosmid clones located in close proximity to the ends of a 1.2-Mb yeast artificial chromosome clone extending into the FRDA candidate region provides physical evidence for the order of the marker loci to be cen-D9S202-D9S5-D9S15-qter. The possibility that a pericentric inversion, occurring naturally in ∼1 of the normal population, may affect the order of markers within this region has been eliminated. Considered in association with the interpretation of a recombination event detected in a single affected individual, these data indicate that the FRDA locus is located proximal to
展开▼