Members of the long-range, low-copy-number repetitive DNA sequence family chAB4 are located on nine different human chromosome pairs and the Y chromosome, i.e. on the short arms of all the acrocentrics. To localize the chAB4 sequences more precisely on the acrocentrics, chAB4-specific probes together with rDNA and a number of satellite sequences were hybridized to metaphase chromosomes of normal probands and of carriers of Robertsonian translocations of the frequent types rob(13q14q) and rob(14q21q). The results demonstrate that chAB4 is located on both sides of the rDNA on all the acrocentrics; the exact location, however, may be chromosome specific. Chromosome 22, most probably, is the only chromosome where chAB4 is found in the direct neighbourhood of the centromere. Fluorescence in situ hybridization analyses of metaphase chromosomes of carriers of rob(21q22q) revealed breakpoint diversity for this rare type of Robertsonian translocation chromosome. A direct involvement of chAB4 sequences in recombination processes leading to the Robertsonian translocations analysed in this study can be excluded.