Letters to Nature
Nature 416, 539-542 (4 April 2002) | doi:10.1038/416539a; Received 18 September 2001; Accepted 21 January 2002
A global disorder of imprinting in the human female germ line
Hannah Judson, Bruce E. Hayward, Eamonn Sheridan and David T. Bonthron
- University of Leeds, Molecular Medicine Unit, St. James's University Hospital, Leeds LS9 7TF, UK
Correspondence to: David T. Bonthron Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to D.T.B. (e-mail: Email: d.t.bonthron@leeds.ac.uk).
Imprinted genes are expressed differently depending on whether they are carried by a chromosome of maternal or paternal origin. Correct imprinting is established by germline-specific modifications; failure of this process underlies several inherited human syndromes1, 2, 3, 4, 5. All these imprinting control defects are cis-acting, disrupting establishment or maintenance of allele-specific epigenetic modifications across one contiguous segment of the genome. In contrast, we report here an inherited global imprinting defect. This recessive maternal-effect mutation disrupts the specification of imprints at multiple, non-contiguous loci, with the result that genes normally carrying a maternal methylation imprint assume a paternal epigenetic pattern on the maternal allele. The resulting conception is phenotypically indistinguishable from an androgenetic complete hydatidiform mole6, in which abnormal extra-embryonic tissue proliferates while development of the embryo is absent or nearly so. This disorder offers a genetic route to the identification of trans-acting oocyte factors that mediate maternal imprint establishment.
