No. |
Title |
Authors |
Journal |
173 |
Population variability in X-chromosome inactivation across 9 mammalian species |
Werner, J.M., Hover, J. & Gillis, J. |
Nature communications (2024) 15(8991): |
Abstract
One of the two X-chromosomes in female mammals is epigenetically silenced in embryonic stem cells by X-chromosome inactivation. This creates a mosaic of cells expressing either the maternal or the paternal X allele. The X-chromosome inactivation ratio, the proportion of inactivated parental alleles, varies widely among individuals, representing the largest instance of epigenetic variability within mammalian populations. While various contributing factors to X-chromosome inactivation variability are recognized, namely stochastic and/or genetic effects, their relative contributions are poorly understood. This is due in part to limited cross-species analysis, making it difficult to distinguish between generalizable or species-specific mechanisms for X-chromosome inactivation ratio variability. To address this gap, we measure X-chromosome inactivation ratios in ten mammalian species (9531 individual samples), ranging from rodents to primates, and compare the strength of stochastic models or genetic factors for explaining X-chromosome inactivation variability. Our results demonstrate the embryonic stochasticity of X-chromosome inactivation is a general explanatory model for population X-chromosome inactivation variability in mammals, while genetic factors play a minor role.
Presenter: Minji Baek
Date: 2024.11.28 (THU) 18:00
백민지 학생의 주도로, 포유류에서 XCI(X-chromosome inactivation)가 어떤 패턴을 보이는지에 대해 논의하였습니다.