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

  1. 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.

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