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Publication : Acquisition of the H19 methylation imprint occurs differentially on the parental alleles during spermatogenesis.

First Author  Davis TL Year  1999
Journal  Genomics Volume  58
Issue  1 Pages  18-28
PubMed ID  10331941 Mgi Jnum  J:55520
Mgi Id  MGI:1338608 Doi  10.1006/geno.1999.5813
Citation  Davis TL, et al. (1999) Acquisition of the H19 methylation imprint occurs differentially on the parental alleles during spermatogenesis. Genomics 58(1):18-28
abstractText  The imprinted mouse H19 gene is hypomethylated on the expressed maternal allele and hypermethylated on the silent paternal allele. A 2-kb region of differential methylation located from -2 to -4 kb relative to the H19 transcriptional start site has been proposed to act as the imprinting mark since hypermethylation in this region is inherited from sperm and retained on the paternal allele throughout development. Here, we describe a temporal analysis of the methylation patterns at the H19 locus during postnatal male germ cell development. The 2-kb region is methylated on the paternal allele throughout spermatogenesis, suggesting that methylation is acquired in this region prior to the resumption of mitosis in postnatal male mice. Likewise, more than half of the maternal alleles are hypermethylated prior to the resumption of mitosis. However, the remaining maternal alleles are not hypermethylated until the completion of meiosis I, indicating that de novo methylation in this region is a continuous process. Sequences proximal to the H19 promoter, which are methylated in spermatozoa and on the paternal allele in somatic cells, are differentially methylated in diploid, mitotic spermatogonia. The maternal allele becomes hypermethylated in this region during meiotic prophase. Thus, the parental H19 alleles acquire methylation differentially in the male germline. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.
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