Early in the development of female mammals, one of the two X chromosomes is silenced in half of cells and the other X chromosome is silenced in the remaining half. The basis of this apparent randomness is not understood. We show that before X-inactivation, the two X chromosomes appear to exist in distinct states that correspond to their fates as the active and inactive X chromosomes. Xist and Tsix, noncoding RNAs that control X chromosome fates upon X-inactivation, also determine the states of the X chromosomes prior to X-inactivation. In wild-type ES cells, X chromosomes switch between states; among the progeny of a single cell, a given X chromosome exhibits each state with equal frequency. We propose a model in which the concerted switchi...
Gene-regulatory networks control the establishment and maintenance of alternative gene-expression st...
Female mammalian cells silence one of their two X chromosomes, resulting in equal expression levels ...
Early in development, placental and marsupial mammals harbouring at least two X chromosomes per nucl...
Early in the development of female mammals, one of the two X chromosomes is silenced in half of cell...
Early in the development of female mammals, one of the two X chromosomes is silenced in half of cell...
Early in the development of female mammals, one of the two X chromosomes is silenced in half of cell...
X chromosome inactivation (XCI) reduces the number of actively transcribed X chromosomes to one per ...
In eutherian mammals, dosage compensation between XX females and XY males is achieved by the transcr...
AbstractDuring X inactivation, mammalian female cells make the selection of one active and one inact...
Background: During early embryonic development, one of the two X chromosomes in mammalian female cel...
To ensure dosage compensation between the sexes, one randomly chosen X chromosome is silenced in eac...
SummaryRandom X inactivation represents a paradigm for monoallelic gene regulation during early ES c...
AbstractIn female mammals a “random choice” mechanism decides which of the two X chromosomes will be...
AbstractX chromosome inactivation (XCI) is the phenomenon through which one of the two X chromosomes...
AbstractX inactivation results in inactivation of one X chromosome to compensate for gene dosage dif...
Gene-regulatory networks control the establishment and maintenance of alternative gene-expression st...
Female mammalian cells silence one of their two X chromosomes, resulting in equal expression levels ...
Early in development, placental and marsupial mammals harbouring at least two X chromosomes per nucl...
Early in the development of female mammals, one of the two X chromosomes is silenced in half of cell...
Early in the development of female mammals, one of the two X chromosomes is silenced in half of cell...
Early in the development of female mammals, one of the two X chromosomes is silenced in half of cell...
X chromosome inactivation (XCI) reduces the number of actively transcribed X chromosomes to one per ...
In eutherian mammals, dosage compensation between XX females and XY males is achieved by the transcr...
AbstractDuring X inactivation, mammalian female cells make the selection of one active and one inact...
Background: During early embryonic development, one of the two X chromosomes in mammalian female cel...
To ensure dosage compensation between the sexes, one randomly chosen X chromosome is silenced in eac...
SummaryRandom X inactivation represents a paradigm for monoallelic gene regulation during early ES c...
AbstractIn female mammals a “random choice” mechanism decides which of the two X chromosomes will be...
AbstractX chromosome inactivation (XCI) is the phenomenon through which one of the two X chromosomes...
AbstractX inactivation results in inactivation of one X chromosome to compensate for gene dosage dif...
Gene-regulatory networks control the establishment and maintenance of alternative gene-expression st...
Female mammalian cells silence one of their two X chromosomes, resulting in equal expression levels ...
Early in development, placental and marsupial mammals harbouring at least two X chromosomes per nucl...