A five-day-old human blastocyst.
Express Yourself: How Zygotes Sort Out Imprinted Genes
Researchers at the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and the Toronto Western Research Institute peel away some of the enduring mystery of how zygotes or fertilized eggs determine which copies of parental genes will be used or ignored.
In developing humans and other mammals, not all genes are created equal – or equally used. The expression of certain genes, known as imprinted genes, is determined by just one copy of the parents’ genetic contribution. In humans, there are at least 80 known imprinted genes. If a copy of an imprinted gene fails to function correctly – or if both copies are expressed – the result can be a variety of heritable conditions, such as Prader-Willi and Angelman syndromes, or diseases like cancer.
In the Cell paper, a team of scientists, led by Bing Ren, PhD, head of the Laboratory of Gene Regulation at the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research at UC San Diego, describe in greater detail how differential DNA methylation in the two parental genomes set the stage for selective expression of imprinted genes in the mouse. Differential DNA methylation is essential to normal development in humans and other higher organisms. It involves the addition of hydrocarbon compounds called methyls to cytosine, one of the four bases or building blocks of DNA. Such addition alters the expression of different genes, boosting or suppressing them to help direct embryonic growth and development.
The process is sometimes called epigenetic regulation. Epigenetics is the study of factors influencing inheritance beyond the genes themselves. “DNA is just half the story,” said Ren, who also heads the San Diego Epigenome Center, one of four centers established by the National Institutes of Health to focus on epigenetics research.
“Understanding how these limited imprinted regions control regulation can help us better understand how certain diseases happen,” said Ren, a professor of cellular and molecular medicine in the UC San Diego School of Medicine. “That can help us develop better diagnostic tools for detecting genetic abnormalities and perhaps learn how to predict whether something bad will happen.”
59 Notes/ Hide
-
dorodoro liked this
-
stranglebuddy liked this
-
serpentbearer reblogged this from bioguru
-
ressurection-test liked this
-
thump-thumpp reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
felziyu liked this
-
touba liked this
-
what-a-ride reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
illbeadoctorsomeday reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
aguilarrr liked this
-
hippygrungehipster liked this
-
yuruyurau reblogged this from bioguru
-
propaganda-duende liked this
-
chasingdunamis liked this
-
doctorofnothing liked this
-
sinidentidades reblogged this from thenoobyorker
-
thenoobyorker reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences and added:
UCSD Health Sciences News Some...you responded poorly
-
jeremymobio reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
dewipat liked this
-
sillygooseforever reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
callstheadventurescience reblogged this from bioguru
-
karatepop liked this
-
amna--s liked this
-
breynoso liked this
-
ninaesse liked this
-
bioguru reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
realfakescientist reblogged this from bioguru
-
e-gene liked this
-
simmadownrambleon reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
nazlio69 reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
biocas liked this
-
countdown-to-your-extinction reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
cardsandcardiology liked this
-
anime-nerd reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
fetbk reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
whoadifferences liked this
-
bloody-but-unbowed reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
xtinastat liked this
-
ouranimallove reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
saltedcarthage reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
life-isabeach reblogged this from thecloudsareall-onfire
-
klee91 reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
keenbeankev liked this
-
thecloudsareall-onfire reblogged this from sometimesthefallkillsyou
-
amandantory liked this
-
amandantory reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
sometimesthefallkillsyou liked this
-
sometimesthefallkillsyou reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
-
karengmendezzz liked this
-
proto-flake reblogged this from ucsdhealthsciences
- Show more notes

