International audienceMammalian genes controlled by genomic imprinting play important roles in development and diverse postnatal processes. A growing number of congenital disorders have been linked to genomic imprinting. Each of these is caused by perturbed gene expression at one principal imprinted domain. Some imprinting disorders, including the Prader-Willi and Angelman syndromes, are caused almost exclusively by genetic mutations. In several others, including the Beckwith-Wiedemann and Silver-Russell growth syndromes, and transient neonatal diabetes mellitus, imprinted expression is perturbed mostly by epigenetic alterations at 'imprinting control regions' and at other specific regulatory sequences. In a minority of these patients, DNA ...
Genomic imprinting is a mechanism in which gene expression varies depending on parental origin. Impr...
Background: Genomic imprinting is allelic restriction of gene expression potential depending on pare...
Background It is now widely acknowledged that there may be a genetic contribution to learning disab...
Mammalian genes controlled by genomic imprinting play important roles in development and diverse pos...
Genomic imprinting is a remarkable phenomenon through which certain genes show monoallelic expressio...
International audienceImprinted genes play important roles in the regulation of growth and developme...
Congenital imprinting disorders (IDs) are characterised by molecular changes affecting imprinted chr...
Certain mammalian genes are expressed exclusively from either the paternal or the maternal chromosom...
Genomic imprinting, the monoallelic and parent-of-origin-dependent expression of a subset of genes, ...
There are at least 6 well-studied imprinting domains on human autosomes. Each domain is under the re...
Genomic imprinting involves a DNA methylation-dependent and parent-of-origin-specific regulation of ...
Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic phenomenon restricting gene expression in a manner dependent on ...
Epigenetic regulation orchestrates gene expression with exquisite precision, over a huge dynamic ran...
Imprinting disorders are associated with mutations and epimutations affecting imprinted genes, that ...
Genomic imprinting is a mechanism in which gene expression varies depending on parental origin. Impr...
Background: Genomic imprinting is allelic restriction of gene expression potential depending on pare...
Background It is now widely acknowledged that there may be a genetic contribution to learning disab...
Mammalian genes controlled by genomic imprinting play important roles in development and diverse pos...
Genomic imprinting is a remarkable phenomenon through which certain genes show monoallelic expressio...
International audienceImprinted genes play important roles in the regulation of growth and developme...
Congenital imprinting disorders (IDs) are characterised by molecular changes affecting imprinted chr...
Certain mammalian genes are expressed exclusively from either the paternal or the maternal chromosom...
Genomic imprinting, the monoallelic and parent-of-origin-dependent expression of a subset of genes, ...
There are at least 6 well-studied imprinting domains on human autosomes. Each domain is under the re...
Genomic imprinting involves a DNA methylation-dependent and parent-of-origin-specific regulation of ...
Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic phenomenon restricting gene expression in a manner dependent on ...
Epigenetic regulation orchestrates gene expression with exquisite precision, over a huge dynamic ran...
Imprinting disorders are associated with mutations and epimutations affecting imprinted genes, that ...
Genomic imprinting is a mechanism in which gene expression varies depending on parental origin. Impr...
Background: Genomic imprinting is allelic restriction of gene expression potential depending on pare...
Background It is now widely acknowledged that there may be a genetic contribution to learning disab...