Difference between revisions of "Methylation"
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==Methylation and ASD== | ==Methylation and ASD== | ||
− | One other hypothesis that may account for the widespread genetic defects found in ASD patients is that there may be abnormal methylation of brain-expressed genes on the X chromosome which in turn causes abnormal expression levels of genes important during development. These alternations cause one or more genes on the single X chromosome in males to be either partially silenced or over-expressed. This similarly happens in females, but the random X-chromosome inactivation might lesson autism predisposition and prevalence in females. This proposal is consistent with the findings that males make up a significantly larger amounts of ASD cases than females.<sup> | + | One other hypothesis that may account for the widespread genetic defects found in ASD patients is that there may be abnormal methylation of brain-expressed genes on the X chromosome which in turn causes abnormal expression levels of genes important during development. These alternations cause one or more genes on the single X chromosome in males to be either partially silenced or over-expressed. This similarly happens in females, but the random X-chromosome inactivation might lesson autism predisposition and prevalence in females. This proposal is consistent with the findings that males make up a significantly larger amounts of ASD cases than females.<sup>1</sup> |
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<div style="float:left; padding:10px; background:yellow; border:2px solid black;font-size:large;"><b>[[Genetics]]</b></div> | <div style="float:left; padding:10px; background:yellow; border:2px solid black;font-size:large;"><b>[[Genetics]]</b></div> | ||
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====References==== | ====References==== | ||
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+ | 1. Jones, J.R. et. al. Hypothesis: Dysregulation of Methylation of Brain-Expressed Genes on the X Chromosome and Autism Spectrum Disorders. ''American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A'' 146A:2213-2220 (2008). PMID 18698615 |
Latest revision as of 13:41, 1 April 2010
Methylation and ASD
One other hypothesis that may account for the widespread genetic defects found in ASD patients is that there may be abnormal methylation of brain-expressed genes on the X chromosome which in turn causes abnormal expression levels of genes important during development. These alternations cause one or more genes on the single X chromosome in males to be either partially silenced or over-expressed. This similarly happens in females, but the random X-chromosome inactivation might lesson autism predisposition and prevalence in females. This proposal is consistent with the findings that males make up a significantly larger amounts of ASD cases than females.1
References
1. Jones, J.R. et. al. Hypothesis: Dysregulation of Methylation of Brain-Expressed Genes on the X Chromosome and Autism Spectrum Disorders. American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A 146A:2213-2220 (2008). PMID 18698615