AbstractDuring X inactivation, mammalian female cells make the selection of one active and one inactive X chromosome. X chromosome choice occurs randomly and results in Xist upregulation on the inactive X. We have hypothesized that the antisense gene, Tsix, controls Xist expression. Here, we create a targeted deletion of Tsix in female and male mouse cells. Despite a deficiency of Tsix RNA, X chromosome counting remains intact: female cells still inactivate one X, while male cells block X inactivation. However, heterozygous female cells show skewed Xist expression and primary nonrandom inactivation of the mutant X. The ability of the mutant X to block Xist accumulation is compromised. We conclude that Tsix regulates Xist in cis and determin...
SummaryRandom X inactivation represents a paradigm for monoallelic gene regulation during early ES c...
AbstractLow level Xist expression can be detected from both active X chromosomes (Xa) in female embr...
X-chromosome inactivation is evolution's answer to compensate for the gonosomal discrepancy between ...
AbstractDuring X inactivation, mammalian female cells make the selection of one active and one inact...
AbstractA new study shows that expression of Tsix, an antisense Xist gene, can be controlled by impr...
AbstractX inactivation results in inactivation of one X chromosome to compensate for gene dosage dif...
SummaryDifferentiating pluripotent epiblast cells in eutherians undergo random X-inactivation, which...
AbstractIn female mammals a “random choice” mechanism decides which of the two X chromosomes will be...
X inactivation is the mammalian method for X-chromosome dosage compensation, but some features of th...
Early in the development of female mammals, one of the two X chromosomes is silenced in half of cell...
SummaryX inactivation is controlled by Xist and its antisense gene, Tsix, neither of which encodes a...
Early in the development of female mammals, one of the two X chromosomes is silenced in half of cell...
Transcriptional silencing of the human inactive X chromosome is induced by the XIST gene within the ...
In placental mammals, dosage compensation of the sex chromosomes isachieved through inactivation of ...
Differentiating pluripotent epiblast cells in eutherians undergo random X-inactivation, which equali...
SummaryRandom X inactivation represents a paradigm for monoallelic gene regulation during early ES c...
AbstractLow level Xist expression can be detected from both active X chromosomes (Xa) in female embr...
X-chromosome inactivation is evolution's answer to compensate for the gonosomal discrepancy between ...
AbstractDuring X inactivation, mammalian female cells make the selection of one active and one inact...
AbstractA new study shows that expression of Tsix, an antisense Xist gene, can be controlled by impr...
AbstractX inactivation results in inactivation of one X chromosome to compensate for gene dosage dif...
SummaryDifferentiating pluripotent epiblast cells in eutherians undergo random X-inactivation, which...
AbstractIn female mammals a “random choice” mechanism decides which of the two X chromosomes will be...
X inactivation is the mammalian method for X-chromosome dosage compensation, but some features of th...
Early in the development of female mammals, one of the two X chromosomes is silenced in half of cell...
SummaryX inactivation is controlled by Xist and its antisense gene, Tsix, neither of which encodes a...
Early in the development of female mammals, one of the two X chromosomes is silenced in half of cell...
Transcriptional silencing of the human inactive X chromosome is induced by the XIST gene within the ...
In placental mammals, dosage compensation of the sex chromosomes isachieved through inactivation of ...
Differentiating pluripotent epiblast cells in eutherians undergo random X-inactivation, which equali...
SummaryRandom X inactivation represents a paradigm for monoallelic gene regulation during early ES c...
AbstractLow level Xist expression can be detected from both active X chromosomes (Xa) in female embr...
X-chromosome inactivation is evolution's answer to compensate for the gonosomal discrepancy between ...