Author:
AINSCOUGH JUSTIN F-X.,JOHN ROSALIND M.,SURANI M. AZIM
Abstract
Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic mode of gene regulation that
results in expression of the
autosomal ‘imprinted’ genes from only a single allele, determined
exclusively by parental origin.
To date over 20 imprinted genes have been identified in mouse and man and
these appear to lie in
clusters in restricted regions on a subset of chromosomes. This may be
a critical feature of
imprinting suggesting a domain-type mode of regulation. Imprinted domains
are replicated
asynchronously, show sex-specific meiotic recombination frequencies and
have CpG-rich regions
that are differentially methylated, often associated with the imprinted
genes themselves. Mouse
distal chromosome 7 is one such domain, containing at least nine imprinted
genes spanning over
1 Mb of DNA. For the maternally expressed p57Kip2
gene, passage through the female germline is
essential to generate the active state, whereas passage through the male
germline is needed to force
the maternally expressed H19 gene into an inactive state. It is
therefore possible that the mouse
distal chromosome 7 imprinted domain is actually composed of two or more
independently
regulated subdomains.
Subject
Genetics,General Medicine
Cited by
13 articles.
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