Genomic imprinting: control of gene expression by epigenetic inheritance

MA Surani - Current opinion in cell biology, 1994 - Elsevier
MA Surani
Current opinion in cell biology, 1994Elsevier
One parental copy of an imprinted gene is invariably expressed during development. The
characteristic of the heritable epigenetic germline imprint remains elusive, but recent
evidence stresses the necessity for additional post-zygotic epigenetic modifications to
account for this temporal and tissue-specific mono-allelic expression. Preliminary insight into
a diversity of post-zygotic control mechanisms is beginning to emerge.
Abstract
One parental copy of an imprinted gene is invariably expressed during development. The characteristic of the heritable epigenetic germline imprint remains elusive, but recent evidence stresses the necessity for additional post-zygotic epigenetic modifications to account for this temporal and tissue-specific mono-allelic expression. Preliminary insight into a diversity of post-zygotic control mechanisms is beginning to emerge.
Elsevier