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Publication : Parental imprinting: potentially active chromatin of the repressed maternal allele of the mouse insulin-like growth factor II (Igf2) gene.

First Author  Sasaki H Year  1992
Journal  Genes Dev Volume  6
Issue  10 Pages  1843-56
PubMed ID  1383088 Mgi Jnum  J:2879
Mgi Id  MGI:51399 Doi  10.1101/gad.6.10.1843
Citation  Sasaki H, et al. (1992) Parental imprinting: potentially active chromatin of the repressed maternal allele of the mouse insulin-like growth factor II (Igf2) gene. Genes Dev 6(10):1843-56
abstractText  The mouse insulin-like growth factor II (Igf2) gene, which is located on distal chromosome 7 (Chr7), has been shown previously to undergo tissue-specific parental imprinting. This imprinting results in expression of Igf2 from the paternally inherited chromosome and repression of the maternally inherited allele in most tissues of the developing embryo. We are using embryos with the maternal duplication and paternal deficiency of distal Chr7 to characterize the mechanism that underlies repression of the maternal allele. We show that the chromatin of the 5' region of the repressed Igf2 allele is potentially active for transcription rather than heterochromatic. In particular, a CpG island that comprises one of the two strong promoters is unmethylated at both parental alleles, and DNase I hypersensitive sites in and around the strong promoters are consistently present on both parental chromosomes. In agreement with the chromatin state, primary transcripts from the maternal Igf2 allele have been detected at low but significant levels. These findings differ from observations in other instances of imprinting, namely, X-chromosome inactivation and transgene imprinting in mice. Although no parent-specific differences were detected in either DNA methylation or sensitivity to nucleases at these promoters, we have observed parental methylation differences in a region several kilobases upstream of the first exon. The differential activity of the parental Igf2 alleles could be achieved through epigenetic modifications situated outside the promoters or by subtle and yet unidentified modifications at the promoters.
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