Literature DB >> 11845283

Retrotransposed genes such as Frat3 in the mouse Chromosome 7C Prader-Willi syndrome region acquire the imprinted status of their insertion site.

J H Chai1, D P Locke, T Ohta, J M Greally, R D Nicholls.   

Abstract

Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) results from loss of function of a 1.0- to 1.5-Mb domain of imprinted, paternally expressed genes in human Chromosome (Chr) 15q11-q13. The loss of imprinted gene expression in the homologous region in mouse Chr 7C leads to a similar neonatal PWS phenotype. Several protein-coding genes in the human PWS region are intronless, possibly arising by retrotransposition. Here we present evidence for continued acquisition of genes by the mouse PWS region during evolution. Bioinformatic analyses identified a BAC containing four genes, Mkrn3, Magel2, Ndn, Frat3, and the Atp5l-ps1 pseudogene, the latter two genes derived from recent L1-mediated retrotransposition. Analyses of eight overlapping BACs indicate that these genes are clustered within 120 kb in two inbred strains, in the order tel-Atp5l-ps1-Frat3-Mkrn3-Magel2-Ndn-cen. Imprinting analyses show that Frat3 is differentially methylated and expressed solely from the paternal allele in a transgenic mouse model of Angelman syndrome, with no expression from the maternal allele in a mouse model of PWS. Loss of Frat3 expression may, therefore, contribute to the phenotype of mouse models of PWS. The identification of five intronless genes in a small genomic interval suggests that this region is prone to retroposition in germ cells or their zygotic and embryonic cell precursors, and that it allows the subsequent functional expression of these foreign sequences. The recent evolutionary acquisition of genes that adopt the same imprint as older, flanking genes indicates that the newly acquired genes become 'innocent bystanders' of a primary epigenetic signal causing imprinting in the PWS domain.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11845283     DOI: 10.1007/s00335-001-2083-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mamm Genome        ISSN: 0938-8990            Impact factor:   2.957


  26 in total

1.  Antisense transcripts with FANTOM2 clone set and their implications for gene regulation.

Authors:  Hidenori Kiyosawa; Itaru Yamanaka; Naoki Osato; Shinji Kondo; Yoshihide Hayashizaki
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2003-06       Impact factor: 9.043

2.  A small family of sushi-class retrotransposon-derived genes in mammals and their relation to genomic imprinting.

Authors:  Neil A Youngson; Sylvia Kocialkowski; Nina Peel; Anne C Ferguson-Smith
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2005-09-12       Impact factor: 2.395

3.  Short interspersed transposable elements (SINEs) are excluded from imprinted regions in the human genome.

Authors:  John M Greally
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2001-12-26       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  An extended domain of Kcnq1ot1 silencing revealed by an imprinted fluorescent reporter.

Authors:  Meaghan J Jones; Aaron B Bogutz; Louis Lefebvre
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2011-05-16       Impact factor: 4.272

Review 5.  Retrotransposition and genomic imprinting.

Authors:  Michael Cowley; Rebecca J Oakey
Journal:  Brief Funct Genomics       Date:  2010-06-29       Impact factor: 4.241

Review 6.  Post-natal imprinting: evidence from marsupials.

Authors:  J M Stringer; A J Pask; G Shaw; M B Renfree
Journal:  Heredity (Edinb)       Date:  2014-03-05       Impact factor: 3.821

7.  Genome-wide methylation analysis of retrocopy-associated CpG islands and their genomic environment.

Authors:  Katrin Grothaus; Deniz Kanber; Alexandra Gellhaus; Barbara Mikat; Julia Kolarova; Reiner Siebert; Dagmar Wieczorek; Bernhard Horsthemke
Journal:  Epigenetics       Date:  2016-02-18       Impact factor: 4.528

8.  Influence of the Prader-Willi syndrome imprinting center on the DNA methylation landscape in the mouse brain.

Authors:  Jason O Brant; Alberto Riva; James L Resnick; Thomas P Yang
Journal:  Epigenetics       Date:  2014-11       Impact factor: 4.528

9.  Identification of four highly conserved genes between breakpoint hotspots BP1 and BP2 of the Prader-Willi/Angelman syndromes deletion region that have undergone evolutionary transposition mediated by flanking duplicons.

Authors:  J-H Chai; D P Locke; J M Greally; J H M Knoll; T Ohta; J Dunai; A Yavor; E E Eichler; R D Nicholls
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2003-09-23       Impact factor: 11.025

Review 10.  RNAs of the human chromosome 15q11-q13 imprinted region.

Authors:  Stormy J Chamberlain
Journal:  Wiley Interdiscip Rev RNA       Date:  2012-12-03       Impact factor: 9.957

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