|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Inheritance of a pre-inactivated paternal X chromosome in early mouse embryos.

First Author  Huynh KD Year  2003
Journal  Nature Volume  426
Issue  6968 Pages  857-62
PubMed ID  14661031 Mgi Jnum  J:87102
Mgi Id  MGI:2683381 Doi  10.1038/nature02222
Citation  Huynh KD, et al. (2003) Inheritance of a pre-inactivated paternal X chromosome in early mouse embryos. Nature 426(6968):857-62
abstractText  In mammals, dosage compensation ensures equal X-chromosome expression between males (XY) and females (XX) by transcriptionally silencing one X chromosome in XX embryos. In the prevailing view, the XX zygote inherits two active X chromosomes, one each from the mother and father, and X inactivation does not occur until after implantation. Here, we report evidence to the contrary in mice. We find that one X chromosome is already silent at zygotic gene activation (2-cell stage). This X chromosome is paternal in origin and exhibits a gradient of silencing. Genes close to the X-inactivation centre show the greatest degree of inactivation, whereas more distal genes show variable inactivation and can partially escape silencing. After implantation, imprinted silencing in extraembryonic tissues becomes globalized and more complete on a gene-by-gene basis. These results argue that the XX embryo is in fact dosage compensated at conception along much of the X chromosome. We propose that imprinted X inactivation results from inheritance of a pre-inactivated X chromosome from the paternal germ line.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

2 Authors

1 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression