## Abstract During their embryogenesis, marsupials develop a unique structure, the shoulder arch, which provides the structural and muscle‐attachment support necessary for the newborn's crawl to the teat. One of the most pronounced and important aspects of the shoulder arch is an enlarged coracoid.
Conservation of Dnmt1o cytosine methyltransferase in the marsupial Monodelphis domestica
✍ Scribed by Feng Ding; Carol Patel; Sarayu Ratnam; John R. McCarrey; J. Richard Chaillet
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 359 KB
- Volume
- 36
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1526-954X
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Summary: Imprinted genes have been identified in both eutherian mammals and in marsupials. In eutherian species, there is a conservation of the imprinting process, both in terms of the genes imprinted and the epigenetic inheritance mechanism. In the mouse, the inheritance of gametic methylation patterns depends on an oocyte‐derived isoform of the Dnmt1 (cytosine‐5)‐methyltransferase protein, Dnmt1o, which functions during preimplantation development to maintain methylation patterns on imprinted alleles. To determine if this component of genomic imprinting is also found in marsupials, Dnmt1 isoforms were examined in somatic cells and germ cells of the South American opossum Monodelphis domestica. There is a Dnmt1o protein in Monodelphis oocytes that is synthesized, as in the mouse, from a different transcript than the somatic Dnmt1 protein. Thus, an essential component of imprinting in eutherian mammals is found in a marsupial species, suggesting that marsupials and eutherian mammals imprint their genes with the same methylation‐dependent mechanism. genesis 36:209–213, 2003. © 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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