6533b821fe1ef96bd127b095
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Chicken orthologues of mammalian imprinted genes are clustered on macrochromosomes and replicate asynchronously.
Michael SchmidThomas HaafUlrich ZechnerIndrajit NandaUlrich Dünzingersubject
GeneticsDNA ReplicationChromosomes Artificial BacterialGenomeDNA replicationBiologyGenomeChromosomesChromatinEvolution MolecularGenomic ImprintingMiceGene expressionGene clusterGeneticsMicrochromosomeAnimalsHumansGenomic imprintingGeneChickensdescription
In the chicken genome, most orthologues of mouse imprinted genes are clustered on macrochromosomes. Only a few orthologues are located in the microchromosome complement. Macrochromosomal and, to a lesser extent, microchromosomal regions containing imprinted gene orthologues exhibit asynchronous DNA replication. We conclude that highly conserved arrays of imprinted gene orthologues were selected during vertebrate evolution, long before these genes were recruited for parent-specific gene expression by genomic imprinting mechanisms. Evidently, the macrochromosome complement provides a better chromatin environment for the establishment of asynchronous DNA replication and imprinted gene expression later in evolution than microchromosomes.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2005-09-01 | Trends in genetics : TIG |