Genomic imprinting: insights from plants. Gehring, M. Volume 47 of Annual Review of Genetics, 2013. abstract bibtex Imprinted gene expression-the biased expression of alleles dependent on their parent of origin-is an important type of epigenetic gene regulation in flowering plants and mammals. In plants, genes are imprinted primarily in the endosperm, the triploid placenta-like tissue that surrounds and nourishes the embryo during its development. Differential allelic expression is correlated with active DNA demethylation by DNA glycosylases and repressive targeting by the Polycomb group proteins. Imprinted gene expression is one consequence of a large-scale remodeling to the epigenome, primarily directed at transposable elements, that occurs in gametes and seeds. This remodeling could be important for maintaining the epigenome in the embryo as well as for establishing gene imprinting. © 2013 by Annual Reviews. All rights reserved.
@book{gehring_genomic_2013,
series = {Annual {Review} of {Genetics}},
title = {Genomic imprinting: insights from plants},
volume = {47},
shorttitle = {Genomic imprinting},
abstract = {Imprinted gene expression-the biased expression of alleles dependent on their parent of origin-is an important type of epigenetic gene regulation in flowering plants and mammals. In plants, genes are imprinted primarily in the endosperm, the triploid placenta-like tissue that surrounds and nourishes the embryo during its development. Differential allelic expression is correlated with active DNA demethylation by DNA glycosylases and repressive targeting by the Polycomb group proteins. Imprinted gene expression is one consequence of a large-scale remodeling to the epigenome, primarily directed at transposable elements, that occurs in gametes and seeds. This remodeling could be important for maintaining the epigenome in the embryo as well as for establishing gene imprinting. © 2013 by Annual Reviews. All rights reserved.},
language = {English},
author = {Gehring, M.},
year = {2013},
keywords = {DNA demethylation, Imprinting, Plant reproduction, Polycomb, Transposable elements},
}
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