Literature DB >> 9880240

X chromosome inactivation patterns in normal females.

O Racchi1, R Mangerini, D Rapezzi, M Rolfo, G F Gaetani, A M Ferraris.   

Abstract

Since one of the two X chromosomes is randomly inactivated at an early stage of female embryonic development, X-linked markers have been used to study the origin and development of various neoplastic disorders in affected heterozygous women; clonality assays have provided a useful tool to the understanding of the mechanisms underlying the development of neoplasia. Recently, a technique of clonal analysis has been devised that takes advantage of a highly polymorphic short tandem repeat within the X-linked human androgen receptor (AR) gene, resulting in a heterozygosity rate approaching 90%. The rapid expansion of the number of women now suitable for X inactivation analysis has however given rise to new controversies, one of the more troublesome being the possibility of a modification of the pattern of X- chromosome inactivation pattern in blood cells of elderly women. In the present study we analyze with the AR assay a group of 166 healthy females aged between 8 and 94 years, with no history of genetic or neoplastic familial disorders. We failed to find any correlation between age and X- chromosome inactivation pattern (r = 0.17), even subdividing the subjects in different age groups according to the criteria used by other researchers, and therefore reaffirm that, when tested for with well-standardized and accurate criteria, extremely unbalanced inactivation of the X chromosome is a truly uncommon phenomenon in normal women. Copyright 1998 Academic Press.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9880240     DOI: 10.1006/bcmd.1998.0213

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Blood Cells Mol Dis        ISSN: 1079-9796            Impact factor:   3.039


  7 in total

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5.  Very mild cases of Rett syndrome with skewed X inactivation.

Authors:  P Huppke; E M Maier; A Warnke; C Brendel; F Laccone; J Gärtner
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6.  Association of tri-nucleotide (CAG and GGC) repeat polymorphism of androgen receptor gene in Taiwanese women with refractory or remission rheumatoid arthritis.

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  7 in total

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