نتایج جستجو برای: genomic imprinting

تعداد نتایج: 122074  

Journal: :PLoS Genetics 2007
Shunsuke Suzuki Ryuichi Ono Takanori Narita Andrew J Pask Geoffrey Shaw Changshan Wang Takashi Kohda Amber E Alsop Jennifer A. Marshall Graves Yuji Kohara Fumitoshi Ishino Marilyn B Renfree Tomoko Kaneko-Ishino

Among mammals, only eutherians and marsupials are viviparous and have genomic imprinting that leads to parent-of-origin-specific differential gene expression. We used comparative analysis to investigate the origin of genomic imprinting in mammals. PEG10 (paternally expressed 10) is a retrotransposon-derived imprinted gene that has an essential role for the formation of the placenta of the mouse...

Journal: :Trends in genetics : TIG 2007
Timothy A Hore Robert W Rapkins Jennifer A Marshall Graves

Genomic imprinting first evolved in mammals around the time that humans last shared a common ancestor with marsupials and monotremes (180-210 million years ago). Recent comparisons of large imprinted domains in these divergent mammalian groups have shown that imprinting evolved haphazardly at various times in different lineages, perhaps driven by different selective forces. Surprisingly, some i...

2015
Alan M. O’Doherty David E. MacHugh Charles Spillane David A. Magee

Monoallelically expressed genes that exert their phenotypic effect in a parent-of-origin specific manner are considered to be subject to genomic imprinting, the most well understood form of epigenetic regulation of gene expression in mammals. The observed differences in allele specific gene expression for imprinted genes are not attributable to differences in DNA sequence information, but to sp...

Journal: :Genes & development 1994
K E Latham A S Doherty C D Scott R M Schultz

Genomic imprinting in mammals is believed to result from modifications to chromosomes during gametogenesis that inactivate the paternal or maternal allele. The genes encoding the insulin-like growth factor type 2 (Igf2) and its receptor (Igf2r) are reciprocally imprinted and expressed from the paternal and maternal genomes, respectively, in the fetal and adult mouse. We find that both genes are...

Journal: :American journal of human genetics 2000
K Pfeifer

Imprinted genes represent a curious defiance of normal Mendelian genetics. Mammals inherit two complete sets of chromosomes, one from the mother and one from the father, and most autosomal genes will be expressed from both the maternal and the paternal alleles. Imprinted genes, however, are expressed from only one chromosome, in a parent-of-origin-dependent manner. Because silent and active pro...

2013
Benjamin Loppin Rebecca Oakey

Introduction The organizers of the European Molecular Biology Organization Workshop on Genomic Imprinting chose a truly trans-kingdom selection of speakers; there was a strong representation of those working in plants and mammals, with a sprinkling of those studying flies and worms. This organismal diversity was layered further with talks on topics ranging from germ cells, genomic imprinting an...

2004
KATHRYN M. ABEL

schizophrenia is attributable to genes, the locus of genetic defect remains elusive. Moreover, genetic investigation provides little detail, beyond suggesting that the contribution of genes is complex, probably polygenic and unlikely to be sufficient in most cases to allow expression of the syndrome (Vincente & Kennedy, 1997). Some apparently genetic effects also need explanation in a more comp...

Journal: :Annual review of genetics 1997
M S Bartolomei S M Tilghman

A handful of autosomal genes in the mammalian genome are inherited in a silent state from one of the two parents, and in a fully active form from the other, thereby rendering the organism functionally hemizygous for imprinted genes. To date 19 imprinted genes have been identified; 5 are expressed from the maternal chromosome while the rest are expressed from the paternal chromosome. Allele-spec...

Journal: :Briefings in functional genomics 2010
Michael Cowley Rebecca J Oakey

Studies of large imprinted clusters, such as the Gnas locus, have revealed much about the significance of DNA methylation, transcription and other factors in the establishment and maintenance of imprinted gene expression. However, the complexity of such loci can make manipulating them and interpreting the results challenging. We review here a distinct class of imprinted genes, which have arisen...

Journal: :Histology and histopathology 1998
K Yun

The Mendelian inheritance is based on the fundamental rule in which mammalian genes are expressed equally from two homologous biparental alleles. Recently a small number of genes have been identified to show an exception to this rule in that homologous alleles can function differently in somatic cells depending on whether they come from the mother or the father. This intriguing biological pheno...

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