1. The paternal methylation imprint of the mouseH19locus is acquired in the gonocyte stage during foetal testis development
- Author
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Takayuki Ueda, Kuniya Abe, Yoshihide Hayashizaki, Asuka Miura, Motoko Noguchi, Yoichi Matsuda, Misako Yuzuriha, Hiroyuki Sasaki, Yosuke Kawase, Mohamad Zubair, Katsutoshi Niwa, Hideo Shibata, Hirokazu Fujimoto, and Tomohiro Kono
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Genetics ,Cell Biology ,Methylation ,Biology ,Germline ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gonocyte ,DNA methylation ,medicine ,Allele ,Genomic imprinting ,Reprogramming ,Germ cell - Abstract
Background Germline-specific differential DNA methylation that persists through fertilization and embryonic development is thought to be the ‘imprint’ distinguishing the parental alleles of imprinted genes. If such methylation is to work as the imprinting mechanism, however, it has to be reprogrammed following each passage through the germline. Previous studies on maternally methylated genes have shown that their methylation imprints are first erased in primordial germ cells (PGCs) and then re-established during oocyte growth. Results We have examined the timing of the reprogramming of the paternal methylation imprint of the mouse H19 gene during germ cell development. In both male and female PGCs, the paternal allele is partially methylated whereas the maternal allele is unmethylated. This partial methylation is completely erased in the female germline by entry into meiosis, establishing the oocyte methylation pattern. In the male germline, both alleles become methylated, mainly during the gonocyte stage, establishing the sperm methylation pattern. Conclusion The paternal methylation imprint of H19 is established in the male germline and erased in the female germline at specific developmental stages. The identification of the timings of the methylation and demethylation should help to identify and characterize the biochemical basis of the reprogramming of imprinting.
- Published
- 2000
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