Frontera Margalida, Dickins Benjamin, Plagge Antonius, Kelsey Gavin
Laboratory of Developmental Genetics and Imprinting, The Babraham Institute, Cambridge, UK.
Adv Exp Med Biol. 2008;626:41-61. doi: 10.1007/978-0-387-77576-0_4.
The effects of imprinted genes on fetal growth and development have been firmly established. By and large, their roles conform to a conflict over provision of limited maternal resources to offspring, such that paternally expressed imprinted genes in offspring generally promote growth of the fetus, while maternally expressed imprinted genes tend to restrict it. It is comparatively recently that the important effects of imprinted genes in postnatal physiology have begun to be demonstrated, although a similar conflict may apply. In this chapter, we shall review some of the genetic evidence for imprinted effects on obesity, consider the action of selected imprinted genes in the central and peripheral control of energy homeostasis and look in detail at the intriguing effects of imprinting at the Gnas locus. Finally, we shall discuss whether these observations fit expectations of the prevailing theory for the existence of imprinting in mammals and go on to consider imprinted genes as targets for developmental programming.
印记基因对胎儿生长发育的影响已得到确凿证实。总体而言,它们的作用符合在向后代提供有限母体资源方面的一种冲突,即后代中父系表达的印记基因通常促进胎儿生长,而母系表达的印记基因往往会限制胎儿生长。尽管可能存在类似的冲突,但直到最近,印记基因在出生后生理学中的重要作用才开始得到证实。在本章中,我们将回顾一些关于印记基因对肥胖影响的遗传学证据,探讨选定的印记基因在能量稳态的中枢和外周控制中的作用,并详细研究Gnas位点印记的有趣影响。最后,我们将讨论这些观察结果是否符合哺乳动物印记存在的主流理论预期,并进而将印记基因视为发育编程的靶点。