Utilisateur
They upregulate X-linked gene expression and also inactivate one X chromosome in females
Upregulation makes one active X produce enough product in both sexes, and X inactivation prevents females with 2 X chromosomes from overexpressing X-linked genes
An X-linked gene in one mouse species and an autosomal version in another can produce similar mRNA levels in males
Clc4
Mus spretus
Mus musculus
They make the same amount
Because females are mosaics, so some cells express the normal allele
Different cells inactivate different X chromosomes
X-linked disorders such as muscular dystrophy are usually milder in heterozygous females than in affected males
Black versus orange coat color
ARHGAP36
A^O for orange and A^B for black
Orange female
Black female
Orange male
Black male
Tortoiseshell or calico female
Codominant
Random X inactivation creates patches of cells expressing one allele or the other
Orange
Orange
Because the paternal X is preferentially inactivated, so the maternal orange X stays active
Using Cre-lox with fluorescent reporter transgenes on the 2 X chromosomes
Cre removes a loxP-stop-loxP cassette so the fluorescent reporter can be expressed
A cell-type-specific Cre transgene, a maternal X reporter, and a paternal X reporter
nls-tdTomato on one X and nls-GFP on the other
It excises the stop sequence between the loxP sites and turns the reporter on
Because different cells keep different X chromosomes active
Mosaic X inactivation
All are mammals and use an XY system with SRY on the Y chromosome for male sex determination
All upregulate X-linked gene expression and inactivate one X chromosome in females
Human females are random mosaics for maternal versus paternal X activity, while mice have strong experimental evidence for random mosaicism and are often used to visualize it directly
Kangaroos tend to inactivate the paternal X, so female offspring are not random mosaics like typical human tortoiseshell examples
Cytosine
CpG sites
A cytosine with a methyl group attached
About 2 to 7%
A cytosine followed by guanine on the same DNA strand, linked by phosphate. the methylation causes bulging--> major groove
DNA methyltransferase
DNMTs that methylate previously unmethylated DNA
DNMTs that methylate hemi-methylated DNA after replication
Turn off de novo DNMTs and maintenance DNMTs and allow DNA replication to dilute the mark
It blocks excision and insertion, reducing damage from TE movement by essentially turning of the TE's ability to move locations
It reinforces shutdown of genes that a cell type does not need
It helps convert genes from off but leaky to completely off
Methyl-CpG-binding proteins such as MeCP2 recruit histone modifiers such as HP1
It can silence them and contribute to cancer
It is a normal part of X chromosome inactivation
To mark specific maternal or paternal regions differently during oogenesis or spermatogenesis
Older mammals tend to have more DNA methylation, which can help estimate age
To repress transposable element mobilization, reinforce developmental gene regulation, help maintain X chromosome inactivation, and establish genomic imprinting. also more methylation of dna--> older mammal
