2010
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1001214
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The Parental Non-Equivalence of Imprinting Control Regions during Mammalian Development and Evolution

Abstract: In mammals, imprinted gene expression results from the sex-specific methylation of imprinted control regions (ICRs) in the parental germlines. Imprinting is linked to therian reproduction, that is, the placenta and imprinting emerged at roughly the same time and potentially co-evolved. We assessed the transcriptome-wide and ontology effect of maternally versus paternally methylated ICRs at the developmental stage of setting of the chorioallantoic placenta in the mouse (8.5dpc), using two models of imprinting d… Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(52 citation statements)
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References 49 publications
(79 reference statements)
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“…At the maternally methylated ICRs, there is even a tendency to strongly maintain CpG density. At paternal ICRs, in contrast, CpG density is lost during evolution, which indicates that these ICR regions evolve more quickly than the maternal ICRs (Schulz et al, 2010).…”
Section: Genomic Imprinting An Interspecies Barrier?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the maternally methylated ICRs, there is even a tendency to strongly maintain CpG density. At paternal ICRs, in contrast, CpG density is lost during evolution, which indicates that these ICR regions evolve more quickly than the maternal ICRs (Schulz et al, 2010).…”
Section: Genomic Imprinting An Interspecies Barrier?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…How does the maternal genome facilitate expression of paternal alleles? Moreover, the example of Igf2 was ill-chosen because this is one of the few imprinted genes with an ICR that is methylated in paternal rather than maternal germlines (Schulz et al, 2010).…”
Section: Maternal Biases In Imprintingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Genomic imprinting is widely studied due to its involvement in various biological processes such as brain function and behaviour (Garfield et al, 2011), tumorigenesis (Lim & Maher, 2010), control of intra-uterine growth and birth weight (Schulz et al, 2010), reprogramming during embryo and nuclear transfer as well as in somatic cell cloning (Kedia-Mokashi et al, 2011). It provides a mechanism to distinguish between the paternal and maternal genomes and also regulate biological processes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%