An unbiased assessment of the role of imprinted genes in an intergenerational model of developmental programming.

Environmental factors during early life are critical for the later metabolic health of the individual and of future progeny. In our obesogenic environment, it is of great socioeconomic importance to investigate the mechanisms that contribute to the risk of metabolic ill health. Imprinted genes, a cl...

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Main Authors: Elizabeth J Radford, Elvira Isganaitis, Josep Jimenez-Chillaron, Joshua Schroeder, Michael Molla, Simon Andrews, Nathalie Didier, Marika Charalambous, Kirsten McEwen, Giovanna Marazzi, David Sassoon, Mary-Elizabeth Patti, Anne C Ferguson-Smith
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosgenetics/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pgen.1002605&type=printable
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author Elizabeth J Radford
Elvira Isganaitis
Josep Jimenez-Chillaron
Joshua Schroeder
Michael Molla
Simon Andrews
Nathalie Didier
Marika Charalambous
Kirsten McEwen
Giovanna Marazzi
David Sassoon
Mary-Elizabeth Patti
Anne C Ferguson-Smith
author_facet Elizabeth J Radford
Elvira Isganaitis
Josep Jimenez-Chillaron
Joshua Schroeder
Michael Molla
Simon Andrews
Nathalie Didier
Marika Charalambous
Kirsten McEwen
Giovanna Marazzi
David Sassoon
Mary-Elizabeth Patti
Anne C Ferguson-Smith
author_sort Elizabeth J Radford
collection DOAJ
description Environmental factors during early life are critical for the later metabolic health of the individual and of future progeny. In our obesogenic environment, it is of great socioeconomic importance to investigate the mechanisms that contribute to the risk of metabolic ill health. Imprinted genes, a class of functionally mono-allelic genes critical for early growth and metabolic axis development, have been proposed to be uniquely susceptible to environmental change. Furthermore, it has also been suggested that perturbation of the epigenetic reprogramming of imprinting control regions (ICRs) may play a role in phenotypic heritability following early life insults. Alternatively, the presence of multiple layers of epigenetic regulation may in fact protect imprinted genes from such perturbation. Unbiased investigation of these alternative hypotheses requires assessment of imprinted gene expression in the context of the response of the whole transcriptome to environmental assault. We therefore analyse the role of imprinted genes in multiple tissues in two affected generations of an established murine model of the developmental origins of health and disease using microarrays and quantitative RT-PCR. We demonstrate that, despite the functional mono-allelicism of imprinted genes and their unique mechanisms of epigenetic dosage control, imprinted genes as a class are neither more susceptible nor protected from expression perturbation induced by maternal undernutrition in either the F1 or the F2 generation compared to other genes. Nor do we find any evidence that the epigenetic reprogramming of ICRs in the germline is susceptible to nutritional restriction. However, we propose that those imprinted genes that are affected may play important roles in the foetal response to undernutrition and potentially its long-term sequelae. We suggest that recently described instances of dosage regulation by relaxation of imprinting are rare and likely to be highly regulated.
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spelling doaj-art-efe429b1de0a4aaf90f4cb3e0933d64b2025-08-20T02:30:59ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042012-01-0184e100260510.1371/journal.pgen.1002605An unbiased assessment of the role of imprinted genes in an intergenerational model of developmental programming.Elizabeth J RadfordElvira IsganaitisJosep Jimenez-ChillaronJoshua SchroederMichael MollaSimon AndrewsNathalie DidierMarika CharalambousKirsten McEwenGiovanna MarazziDavid SassoonMary-Elizabeth PattiAnne C Ferguson-SmithEnvironmental factors during early life are critical for the later metabolic health of the individual and of future progeny. In our obesogenic environment, it is of great socioeconomic importance to investigate the mechanisms that contribute to the risk of metabolic ill health. Imprinted genes, a class of functionally mono-allelic genes critical for early growth and metabolic axis development, have been proposed to be uniquely susceptible to environmental change. Furthermore, it has also been suggested that perturbation of the epigenetic reprogramming of imprinting control regions (ICRs) may play a role in phenotypic heritability following early life insults. Alternatively, the presence of multiple layers of epigenetic regulation may in fact protect imprinted genes from such perturbation. Unbiased investigation of these alternative hypotheses requires assessment of imprinted gene expression in the context of the response of the whole transcriptome to environmental assault. We therefore analyse the role of imprinted genes in multiple tissues in two affected generations of an established murine model of the developmental origins of health and disease using microarrays and quantitative RT-PCR. We demonstrate that, despite the functional mono-allelicism of imprinted genes and their unique mechanisms of epigenetic dosage control, imprinted genes as a class are neither more susceptible nor protected from expression perturbation induced by maternal undernutrition in either the F1 or the F2 generation compared to other genes. Nor do we find any evidence that the epigenetic reprogramming of ICRs in the germline is susceptible to nutritional restriction. However, we propose that those imprinted genes that are affected may play important roles in the foetal response to undernutrition and potentially its long-term sequelae. We suggest that recently described instances of dosage regulation by relaxation of imprinting are rare and likely to be highly regulated.https://journals.plos.org/plosgenetics/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pgen.1002605&type=printable
spellingShingle Elizabeth J Radford
Elvira Isganaitis
Josep Jimenez-Chillaron
Joshua Schroeder
Michael Molla
Simon Andrews
Nathalie Didier
Marika Charalambous
Kirsten McEwen
Giovanna Marazzi
David Sassoon
Mary-Elizabeth Patti
Anne C Ferguson-Smith
An unbiased assessment of the role of imprinted genes in an intergenerational model of developmental programming.
PLoS Genetics
title An unbiased assessment of the role of imprinted genes in an intergenerational model of developmental programming.
title_full An unbiased assessment of the role of imprinted genes in an intergenerational model of developmental programming.
title_fullStr An unbiased assessment of the role of imprinted genes in an intergenerational model of developmental programming.
title_full_unstemmed An unbiased assessment of the role of imprinted genes in an intergenerational model of developmental programming.
title_short An unbiased assessment of the role of imprinted genes in an intergenerational model of developmental programming.
title_sort unbiased assessment of the role of imprinted genes in an intergenerational model of developmental programming
url https://journals.plos.org/plosgenetics/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pgen.1002605&type=printable
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