Abstract

H19 and Igf2 are located within a large imprinting domain that confers monoallelic silencing of parental alleles. The silent paternal allele of H19 is hypermethylated and relatively resistant to nucleases. Using a 130 kb yeast artificial chromosome clone, appropriate imprinting of both H19 and Igf2 was observed at single insert loci in transgenic mice. Imprinting was also observed for H19-lacZ transgenes containing 4 kb of upstream sequence, but only at multicopy loci. The H19 RNA is therefore not essential for imprinting. When the H19-lacZ transgene was introduced into Drosophila, a 1.2 kb region was identified within the 4 kb upstream flank that functioned as a bi-directional silencer. This cis element is located within a region that is apparently necessary for imprinting in mice. These studies suggest an evolutionarily conserved mechanism for gene silencing in Drosophila and imprinting in mice. We propose a new model for imprinting of H19 and Igf2 in mice in which silencing of H19 is the default state, and activation of the maternal allele requires a specific activator element.

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