Nadeau J H, Berger F G, Cox D R, Crosby J L, Davisson M T, Ferrara D, Fuchs E, Hart C, Hunihan L, Lalley P A
Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Maine 04609.
Genomics. 1989 Oct;5(3):454-62. doi: 10.1016/0888-7543(89)90009-8.
Type I and type II keratins are major constituents of intermediate filaments that play a fundamental role in the cytoskeletal network. By using both somatic cell hybrids and conventional and interspecific linkage crosses, several genes encoding type I keratins, including the epidermal keratin K10, were shown to be closely linked to the homeobox-2 complex and the rex locus on mouse chromosome 11. The absence of crossovers between type I keratin-encoding genes and rex (N = 239), a locus affecting hair development, raises the possibility that mutations at rex and neighboring loci affecting skin and hair development involve type I keratin genes.