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Comparative Study
. 1993 May;4(1):94-7.
doi: 10.1038/ng0593-94.

IGF2 is parentally imprinted during human embryogenesis and in the Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome

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Comparative Study

IGF2 is parentally imprinted during human embryogenesis and in the Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome

R Ohlsson et al. Nat Genet. 1993 May.

Abstract

The phenomenon of parental imprinting involves the preferential expression of one parental allele of a subset of chromosomal genes and has so far only been documented in the mouse. We show here, by exploiting sequence polymorphisms in exon nine of the human insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF2) gene, that only the paternally-inherited allele is active in embryonic and extra-embryonic cells from first trimester pregnancies. In addition, only the paternal allele is expressed in tissues from a patient who suffered from Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome. Thus the parental imprinting of IGF2 appears to be evolutionarily conserved from mouse to man and has implications for the generation of the Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome.

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