Asymmetric regulation of imprinting on the maternal and paternal chromosomes at the Dlk1-Gtl2 imprinted cluster on mouse chromosome 12

被引:392
作者
Lin, SP
Youngson, N
Takada, S
Seitz, H
Reik, W
Paulsen, M
Cavaille, J
Ferguson-Smith, ACF
机构
[1] Univ Cambridge, Dept Anat, Cambridge CB2 3DY, England
[2] Univ Toulouse 3, CNRS, UMR 5099, LBME, F-31062 Toulouse, France
[3] Babraham Inst, Lab Dev Genet & Imprinting, Dev Genet Programme, Cambridge CB2 4AT, England
基金
英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会; 英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
D O I
10.1038/ng1233
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Genomic imprinting causes parental origin specific gene expression(1). Cis-acting regulatory elements that control imprinting are not fully understood but involve regions that become differentially methylated on the two parental chromosomes during male and female gametogenesis(2-4). Understanding properties of maternally and paternally inherited imprints provides insight into the mechanisms and evolution of genomic imprinting. Previously we identified an intergenic germline-derived differentially methylated region (IG-DMR) that is a candidate control element for an imprinted domain on distal mouse chromosome 12 (ref. 5). The 1-Mb cluster contains the paternally expressed protein-coding genes Dlk1 (refs. 6,7) and Dio3 (ref. 8,9) and several maternally expressed non-coding RNAs, including Gtl2 (refs. 6,7,10) and C/D snoRNAs(11). A retrotransposon-like gene (Rtl1) is expressed from the paternal chromosome and has an antisense transcript expressed from the maternal chromosome containing two microRNAs with full complementarity to Rtl1 (ref. 12). Here we show that deletion of the IG-DMR from the maternally inherited chromosome causes bidirectional loss of imprinting of all genes in the cluster. When the deletion is transmitted from the father, imprinting is unaltered. These results prove that the IG-DMR is a control element for all imprinted genes on the maternal chromosome only and indicate that the two parental chromosomes control allele-specific gene expression differently.
引用
收藏
页码:97 / 102
页数:6
相关论文
共 30 条
  • [1] H19 and Igf2 -: enhancing the confusion?
    Arney, KL
    [J]. TRENDS IN GENETICS, 2003, 19 (01) : 17 - 23
  • [2] DNA methylation patterns and epigenetic memory
    Bird, A
    [J]. GENES & DEVELOPMENT, 2002, 16 (01) : 6 - 21
  • [3] Dnmt3L and the establishment of maternal genomic imprints
    Bourc'his, D
    Xu, GL
    Lin, CS
    Bollman, B
    Bestor, TH
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2001, 294 (5551) : 2536 - 2539
  • [4] Epimutations in Prader-Willi and Angelman syndromes: A molecular study of 136 patients with an imprinting defect
    Buiting, K
    Gross, S
    Lich, C
    Gillessen-Kaesbach, G
    El-Maarri, O
    Horsthemke, B
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2003, 72 (03) : 571 - 577
  • [5] Identification of tandemly-repeated C/D snoRNA genes at the imprinted human 14q32 domain reminiscent of those at the Prader-Willi/Angelman syndrome region
    Cavaillé, J
    Seitz, H
    Paulsen, M
    Ferguson-Smith, AC
    Bachellerie, JP
    [J]. HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS, 2002, 11 (13) : 1527 - 1538
  • [6] The callipyge mutation enhances the expression of coregulated imprinted genes in cis without affecting their imprinting status
    Charlier, C
    Segers, K
    Karim, L
    Shay, T
    Gyapay, G
    Cockett, N
    Georges, M
    [J]. NATURE GENETICS, 2001, 27 (04) : 367 - 369
  • [7] Deletion of a silencer element in lgf2 results in loss of imprinting independent of H19
    Constância, M
    Dean, W
    Lopes, S
    Moore, T
    Kelsey, G
    Reik, W
    [J]. NATURE GENETICS, 2000, 26 (02) : 203 - 206
  • [8] Imprinting and the epigenetic asymmetry between parental genomes
    Ferguson-Smith, AC
    Surani, MA
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2001, 293 (5532) : 1086 - 1089
  • [9] Regional loss of imprinting and growth deficiency in mice with a targeted deletion of KvDMR1
    Fitzpatrick, GV
    Soloway, PD
    Higgins, MJ
    [J]. NATURE GENETICS, 2002, 32 (03) : 426 - 431
  • [10] The callipyge locus:: evidence for the trans interaction of reciprocally imprinted genes
    Georges, M
    Charlier, C
    Cockett, N
    [J]. TRENDS IN GENETICS, 2003, 19 (05) : 248 - 252