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Genomic imprinting of a placental lactogen gene in Peromyscus

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Abstract.

The mammalian genome contains over 30 genes whose expression is dependent upon their parent-of-origin. Of these imprinted genes the majority are involved in regulating the rate of fetal growth. In this report we show that in the deer mouse Peromyscus the placental lactogen-1-variant (pPl1-v) gene is paternally expressed throughout fetal development, whereas the linked and closely related pPl1 gene is expressed in a biallelic manner. Neither the more distantly related pPl2A gene, nor the Mus Pl1 gene displays any preferential expression of the paternal allele, suggesting that the acquisition of imprinting of pPl1-v is a relatively recent event in evolution. Although pPl1 expression is temporally mis-regulated in the dysplastic placentae of hybrids between two Peromyscus species, its over-expression cannot account for the aberrant phenotypes of these placentae. We argue that the species-specific imprinting of pPl1-v, encoding a growth factor that regulates nutrient transfer from mothers to their offspring, is consistent with the parent-offspring conflict model that has been proposed to explain the evolution of genomic imprinting.

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Vrana, P.B., Matteson, P.G., Schmidt, J.V. et al. Genomic imprinting of a placental lactogen gene in Peromyscus . Dev Genes Evol 211, 523–532 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00427-001-0188-x

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00427-001-0188-x

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