MRC Centre for Neuropsychiatric Genetics and Genomics, Department of Psychological Medicine and Neurology, Schools of Medicine and Psychology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2010 Sep;1204 Suppl:E14-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2010.05567.x.
Imprinted genes, in contrast to most mammalian genes, are monoallelically expressed in a parent-of-origin dependent manner. The idiosyncratic expression profile associated with imprinted genes arises from the differential epigenetic marking of the alleles in the paternal and maternal germlines. Although small in number, imprinted genes can profoundly influence key developmental and physiological processes, including those in the brain; work in animal models and in humans has shown that such genes can affect behavioral traits and cognition and may confer vulnerability to common mental illnesses. As a consequence of how the X chromosome is inherited, X-linked imprinting may elicit or indeed attenuate sexually dimorphic phenotypes. Thus, studying X-linked imprinting is likely to provide important general information about the evolutionary and mechanistic underpinnings of imprinting, as well as the molecular processes underlying sex-specific neurobiology and sex-biased vulnerability to psychiatric disorders.
与大多数哺乳动物基因不同,印迹基因以亲本来源依赖的方式单等位基因表达。与印迹基因相关的特殊表达谱源自父本和母本生殖细胞中等位基因的差异表观遗传标记。尽管数量较少,但印迹基因可以深刻影响关键的发育和生理过程,包括大脑中的过程;动物模型和人类的研究表明,这些基因可以影响行为特征和认知能力,并可能使人们易患常见精神疾病。由于 X 染色体的遗传方式,X 连锁印迹可能引发或实际上减弱性别二态表型。因此,研究 X 连锁印迹可能为印迹的进化和机制基础以及性别特异性神经生物学和性别偏向易患精神疾病的分子过程提供重要的一般信息。