2004
DOI: 10.1002/bies.20082
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Silence of the fathers: Early X inactivation

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Cited by 23 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Could MSCI in mice and humans also leave a similar epigenetic mark behind? In mice, the paternal X chromosome (which was subject to MSCI during spermatogenesis) shows imprinted X inactivation during preimplantation stages, comparable to the situation in C. elegans (Huynh & Lee, 2003;Cheng & Disteche, 2004;Mak et al, 2004). This paternal imprint is subsequently removed in the embryo proper at the time of implantation, allowing the establishment of normal stochastic X inactivation, while the extraembryonic tissues retain the paternal imprint.…”
Section: Potential Wider Implications Of Sex Chromosome Dynamicsmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Could MSCI in mice and humans also leave a similar epigenetic mark behind? In mice, the paternal X chromosome (which was subject to MSCI during spermatogenesis) shows imprinted X inactivation during preimplantation stages, comparable to the situation in C. elegans (Huynh & Lee, 2003;Cheng & Disteche, 2004;Mak et al, 2004). This paternal imprint is subsequently removed in the embryo proper at the time of implantation, allowing the establishment of normal stochastic X inactivation, while the extraembryonic tissues retain the paternal imprint.…”
Section: Potential Wider Implications Of Sex Chromosome Dynamicsmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Xi in female somatic cells and X and Y inactivation (XYi) in male spermatogenesis are developmentally regulated epigenetic events which have revealed insights into the functional role of histone modifications (Cheng and Disteche, 2004;Heard, 2004;Khalil et al, 2004;Okamoto et al, 2004). The female inactive X and the male meiotic inactive sex chromosomes are largely devoid of histone modifications that are usually present in transcriptionally active regions of the genome (Jeppesen and Turner, 1993;Chaumeil et al, 2004;Khalil et al, 2004;Okamoto et al, 2004).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At implantation (E3.5-E4.5), the paternal X is reactivated, and the X-linked genes are transcribed from both parental X chromosomes in the inner cell mass (Mak et al 2004;Okamoto et al 2004). Then at the blastocyst stage embryonic day 6.5 (E6.5), random X inactivation takes place, and one of the two parental X chromosomes is randomly inactivated (Cheng and Disteche 2004).…”
Section: [Supplemental Materials Is Available For This Article]mentioning
confidence: 99%