Publication | Open Access
Tissue-specific and mosaic imprinting defects underlie opposite congenital growth disorders in mice
19
Citations
39
References
2018
Year
Developmental AnomalyKnockout MouseIgf2 ExpressionDevelopmental BiologyCongenital Growth DisordersGenetic DisorderMedicineGeneticsEpigenetic ChangeExcessive Igf2MorphogenesisGerm Cell DevelopmentEmbryonic DevelopmentAbnormal DevelopmentEpigenetic RegulationCell BiologyEpigeneticsEmbryology
Differential DNA methylation defects of H19/IGF2 are associated with congenital growth disorders characterized by opposite clinical pictures. Due to structural differences between human and mouse, the mechanisms by which mutations of the H19/IGF2 Imprinting Control region (IC1) result in these diseases are undefined. To address this issue, we previously generated a mouse line carrying a humanized IC1 (hIC1) and now replaced the wildtype with a mutant IC1 identified in the overgrowth-associated Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome. The new humanized mouse line shows pre/post-natal overgrowth on maternal transmission and pre/post-natal undergrowth on paternal transmission of the mutation. The mutant hIC1 acquires abnormal methylation during development causing opposite H19/Igf2 imprinting defects on maternal and paternal chromosomes. Differential and possibly mosaic Igf2 expression and imprinting is associated with asymmetric growth of bilateral organs. Furthermore, tissue-specific imprinting defects result in deficient liver- and placenta-derived Igf2 on paternal transmission and excessive Igf2 in peripheral tissues on maternal transmission, providing a possible molecular explanation for imprinting-associated and phenotypically contrasting growth disorders.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
2000 | 1.7K | |
1990 | 1.6K | |
2000 | 1.5K | |
1991 | 1.3K | |
2000 | 1.2K | |
2005 | 503 | |
1995 | 397 | |
2004 | 366 | |
2002 | 315 | |
2015 | 186 |
Page 1
Page 1