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Repressive but not activating epigenetic modifications are aberrant on the inactive X chromosome in live cloned cattle
Author(s) -
GengSheng Cao,
Yu Gao,
Kun Wang,
FangRong Ding,
Ning Li
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
development, growth and differentiation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1440-169X
pISSN - 0012-1592
DOI - 10.1111/j.1440-169x.2009.01120.x
Subject(s) - epigenetics , biology , cloning (programming) , genetics , chromosome , microbiology and biotechnology , gene , computer science , programming language
X inactivation is the process of a chromosome‐wide silencing of the majority of genes on the X chromosome during early mammalian development. This process may be aberrant in cloned animals. Here we show that repressive modifications, such as methylation of DNA, and the presence of methylated histones, H3K9me2 and H3K27me3, exhibit distinct aberrance on the inactive X chromosome in live clones. In contrast, H3K4me3, an active gene marker, is obviously missing from the inactive X chromosome in all cattle studied. This suggests that the disappearance of active histone modifications (H3K4me3) seems to be more important for X inactivation than deposition of marks associated with heterochromatin (DNA methylation, H3K27me3 and H3K9me2). It also implies that even apparently normal clones may have subtle abnormalities in repressive, but not activating epigenetic modifications on the inactive X when they survive to term. We also found that the histone H3 methylations were enriched and co‐localized at q21‐31 of the active X chromosome, which may be associated with an abundance of LINE1 repeat elements.

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