Lecture 14 (Luckman) Flashcards
discovery of imprinting
Lorenz 1973
bonds with first moving stimulus it sees.
occurs during critical periods during very early life.
“Imprinting” describes a fundamental process of life occurring during circumscribed time windows of prenatal and postnatal ontogenesis and having lasting effects.
genomic imprinting
as gamete-of-origin dependent modification of genotype.
experiments in 80s with genomic imprinting?
mice.
- nuclear transplantation made embryos with 1 of 2 sets of parental chromosomes, uni parental embryos.
- embryos that inherited specific chromosome born. one parents only - unifparental disomy.
mammalian genes could function differently depending on whether they come from the mother/father.
first imprinted genes
expressed differently on maternal/paternal.
imprinting has a substantial effect on human genetic disorders.
DNA methylation found to be a key molecular mechanism of imprinting.
mechanism of imprinting?
methylation marks genes differently in egg/sperm, leads to differential gene expression.
key early disoveries
Completion of mouse embryogenesis requires both maternal and paternal genomes:
insert additional pronucleus and fuse into oocyte instead of sperm, creating a parthenogenetic embryo (PG). they contain 2 copies of the maternal genome and no paternal
Development of reconstituted mouse eggs suggests imprinting of the genome during gametogenesis:
removed both female pronuclei frmo the oocyte + replaced with 2 sperm heads, then fuse to form diploid cell. forms an androgenetic embryo (AG), contains 2 copies of the paternal genome.
what happens on day 10 of gestation for AG and PG embryos
PG fairly normal, placental development shit.
AG developement fucked but placenta fairly normal.
Therefore maternal genome contributes significantly to development of the foetus.
paternal genome contributes to development of extra embryonic tissues (ie placenta).
some genes are selectively switched off in germ cells in the testis/ovaries.
Other genes are selectively switched off in germ cells of the ovary.
functional equivalence of parental chromosomes
not functionally equivalent.
Both maternal and paternal genomes are required for normal development.
Mouse embryos with only maternal or paternal chromosomes cannot develop normally, despite being diploid.
This suggests the existence of genes that are only expressed from one parental genome or the other: “genomic imprinting”
imprinted gene expression
depends upon parental opigin.
imprinted genes are only expressed from a single allele, other genes are usually biallelicaly, therefore cannot follow mendellian inheritence.
compare mendelian and imprinted inheritance
mendelian:
In the second generation, both the heterozygous father (+/-) and heterozygous mother (+/-) can parent offspring displaying the “A” trait
imprinted:
Maternally expressed genes are transmitted solely through the matriline.
In the second generation, only the heterozygous mother (+/-) can parent offspring displaying the “A” trait.
The *heterozygous female (-/+) does not express the “A” trait but will transmit it to half of her offspring, unlike her heterozygous brother (-/+)
example of imprinting disease
turner syndrome.
imprinting genes found where
eutherian mammals, marsupials and flowering plants.
selfish gene
it is ALL REPLICAS of a particular bit of DNA distributed throughout the world”
it is trying to get more numerous in the gene pool. Basically it does this by helping to program the bodies in which it finds itself to survive and to reproduce…”
imprinted genes work how?
Imprinted genes are thought to influence the transfer of nutrients to the foetus and the new born from the mother.
paternally expressed genes are selected to
extract more resources from the mother to benefit offspring fitness