The human MHC is one of the most extensively mapped regions of the human genome. Almost all of the class II region of the MHC has already been cloned in cosmids but a gap remained between the DMB and LMP2 genes. Previously, screening of several complete cosmid libraries had failed to bridge this gap, which may contain novel antigen processing or presentation genes. We constructed cosmid libraries from two different sources in order to clone the region: (a) a library with fourfold coverage made from flow-sorted human chromosome 6 DNA and (b) a library derived from a yeast artificial chromosome clone spanning the region. Using this saturation approach, cosmid clones were eventually isolated over the region of interest. A single bacteriophage P1 clone was also obtained spanning the region. The YAC, cosmid, and P1 physical maps were consistent and the distance between the DMB and LMP2 genes was measured as 70 kb. It is not clear why DMB to LMP2 is infrequently represented in cosmid libraries, but the clones that we have obtained will now enable us to search for new coding sequences.