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Reassessment of weak parent-of-origin expression bias shows it rarely exists outside of known imprinted regions

In mouse and human, genes subjected to genomic imprinting have been shown to function in development, behavior, and post-natal adaptations. Failure to correctly imprint genes in human is associated with developmental syndromes, adaptive, and metabolic disorders during life as well as numerous forms...

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Autores principales: Edwards, Carol A, Watkinson, William MD, Telerman, Stephanie B, Hulsmann, Lisa C, Hamilton, Russell S, Ferguson-Smith, Anne C
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10097420/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36916665
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.83364
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author Edwards, Carol A
Watkinson, William MD
Telerman, Stephanie B
Hulsmann, Lisa C
Hamilton, Russell S
Ferguson-Smith, Anne C
author_facet Edwards, Carol A
Watkinson, William MD
Telerman, Stephanie B
Hulsmann, Lisa C
Hamilton, Russell S
Ferguson-Smith, Anne C
author_sort Edwards, Carol A
collection PubMed
description In mouse and human, genes subjected to genomic imprinting have been shown to function in development, behavior, and post-natal adaptations. Failure to correctly imprint genes in human is associated with developmental syndromes, adaptive, and metabolic disorders during life as well as numerous forms of cancer. In recent years researchers have turned to RNA-seq technologies applied to reciprocal hybrid strains of mice to identify novel imprinted genes, causing a threefold increase in genes reported as having a parental origin-specific expression bias. The functional relevance of parental origin-specific expression bias is not fully appreciated especially since many are reported with only minimal parental bias (e.g. 51:49). Here, we present an in-depth meta-analysis of previously generated RNA-seq data and show that the methods used to generate and analyze libraries greatly influence the calling of allele-specific expression. Validation experiments show that most novel genes called with parental-origin-specific allelic bias are artefactual, with the mouse strain contributing a larger effect on expression biases than parental origin. Of the weak novel genes that do validate, most are located at the periphery of known imprinted domains, suggesting they may be affected by local allele- and tissue-specific conformation. Together these findings highlight the need for robust tools, definitions, and validation of putative imprinted genes to provide meaningful information within imprinting databases and to understand the functional and mechanistic implications of the process.
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spelling pubmed-100974202023-04-13 Reassessment of weak parent-of-origin expression bias shows it rarely exists outside of known imprinted regions Edwards, Carol A Watkinson, William MD Telerman, Stephanie B Hulsmann, Lisa C Hamilton, Russell S Ferguson-Smith, Anne C eLife Genetics and Genomics In mouse and human, genes subjected to genomic imprinting have been shown to function in development, behavior, and post-natal adaptations. Failure to correctly imprint genes in human is associated with developmental syndromes, adaptive, and metabolic disorders during life as well as numerous forms of cancer. In recent years researchers have turned to RNA-seq technologies applied to reciprocal hybrid strains of mice to identify novel imprinted genes, causing a threefold increase in genes reported as having a parental origin-specific expression bias. The functional relevance of parental origin-specific expression bias is not fully appreciated especially since many are reported with only minimal parental bias (e.g. 51:49). Here, we present an in-depth meta-analysis of previously generated RNA-seq data and show that the methods used to generate and analyze libraries greatly influence the calling of allele-specific expression. Validation experiments show that most novel genes called with parental-origin-specific allelic bias are artefactual, with the mouse strain contributing a larger effect on expression biases than parental origin. Of the weak novel genes that do validate, most are located at the periphery of known imprinted domains, suggesting they may be affected by local allele- and tissue-specific conformation. Together these findings highlight the need for robust tools, definitions, and validation of putative imprinted genes to provide meaningful information within imprinting databases and to understand the functional and mechanistic implications of the process. eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd 2023-03-14 /pmc/articles/PMC10097420/ /pubmed/36916665 http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.83364 Text en © 2023, Edwards et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Genetics and Genomics
Edwards, Carol A
Watkinson, William MD
Telerman, Stephanie B
Hulsmann, Lisa C
Hamilton, Russell S
Ferguson-Smith, Anne C
Reassessment of weak parent-of-origin expression bias shows it rarely exists outside of known imprinted regions
title Reassessment of weak parent-of-origin expression bias shows it rarely exists outside of known imprinted regions
title_full Reassessment of weak parent-of-origin expression bias shows it rarely exists outside of known imprinted regions
title_fullStr Reassessment of weak parent-of-origin expression bias shows it rarely exists outside of known imprinted regions
title_full_unstemmed Reassessment of weak parent-of-origin expression bias shows it rarely exists outside of known imprinted regions
title_short Reassessment of weak parent-of-origin expression bias shows it rarely exists outside of known imprinted regions
title_sort reassessment of weak parent-of-origin expression bias shows it rarely exists outside of known imprinted regions
topic Genetics and Genomics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10097420/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36916665
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.83364
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