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Publication : The mammalian SIR2alpha protein has a role in embryogenesis and gametogenesis.

First Author  McBurney MW Year  2003
Journal  Mol Cell Biol Volume  23
Issue  1 Pages  38-54
PubMed ID  12482959 Mgi Jnum  J:81010
Mgi Id  MGI:2447945 Doi  10.1128/MCB.23.1.38-54.2003
Citation  McBurney MW, et al. (2003) The mammalian SIR2alpha protein has a role in embryogenesis and gametogenesis. Mol Cell Biol 23(1):38-54
abstractText  The yeast Sir2p protein has an essential role in maintaining telomeric and mating type genes in their transcriptionally inactive state. Mammalian cells have a very large proportion of their genome inactive and also contain seven genes that have regions of homology with the yeast sir2 gene. One of these mammalian genes, sir2alpha, is the presumptive mammalian homologue of the yeast sir2 gene. We set out to determine if sir2alpha plays a role in mammalian gene silencing by creating a strain of mice carrying a null allele of sir2alpha. Animals carrying two null alleles of sir2alpha were smaller than normal at birth, and most died during the early postnatal period. In an outbred background, the sir2alpha null animals often survived to adulthood, but both sexes were sterile. We found no evidence for failure of gene silencing in sir2alpha null animals, suggesting that either SIR2alpha has a different role in mammals than it does in Saccharomyces cerevisiae or that its role in gene silencing in confined to a small subset of mammalian genes. The phenotype of the sir2alpha null animals suggests that the SIR2alpha protein is essential for normal embryogenesis and for normal reproduction in both sexes.
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