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Imprinting disorders

Nature Reviews Disease Primers, 2023
Imprinting disorders (ImpDis) are congenital conditions that are characterized by disturbances of genomic imprinting. The most common individual ImpDis are Prader-Willi syndrome, Angelman syndrome and Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome. Individual ImpDis have similar clinical features, such as growth disturbances and developmental delay, but the disorders are
Eggermann, Thomas   +13 more
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Fateful imprints

Science, 2017
A mysterious method of gene control, and the rare diseases it causes, is shedding its secrets.
openaire   +2 more sources

Molecularly imprinted beads by surface imprinting

Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, 2007
Molecular imprinting is a state-of-the-art technique for imparting molecular recognition properties to a synthetic polymeric matrix. Conventionally, the technique is easily carried out using bulk imprinting, where molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) are prepared in large chunks and post-treatment processes like grinding and sieving are then required.
Chau Jin, Tan, Yen Wah, Tong
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Molecular imprinting

Trends in Biochemical Sciences, 1994
Molecular imprinting is an emerging methodology for the creation of selective recognition sites in synthetic polymers. This technique entails the polymerization of functional monomers in the presence of an important molecule (template). Recent studies have shown that the polymers obtained exhibit a surprisingly high degree of stereo- and regiospecific ...
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Olfactory imprinting

Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 1993
The term imprinting is used to refer to biologically relevant learning during a sensitive period defined by a particular developmental stage or physiological state. Although olfactory imprinting may occur at any age, and some of the best-studied paradigms involve adult animals, recent reports of long-term memory for odorants experienced during prenatal
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Genomic Imprinting: Imprinting with and without methylation

Current Biology, 1994
Methyltransferase-deficient mice reveal that DNA methylation is required for the somatic-cell maintenance of parental imprinting, which alters the expression of a gene according to the parent from which it was inherited.
W, Reik, N D, Allen
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In Brief: Genomic imprinting and imprinting diseases

The Journal of Pathology, 2014
AbstractGenomic imprinting is an epigenetic process by which the male and the female germline confer different DNA methylation marks and histone modifications onto specific gene regions, so that one allele of an imprinted gene is active and the other one is silent.
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Imprinting in neuron

Neuroscience Research, 2006
Although most imprinted genes display parent-origin-specific gene expression in tissues where they are transcribed, some genes are imprinted in a tissue-specific manner. Genes that show brain-specific imprinting or brain-specific lack of imprinting present a unique opportunity to study the process of imprinting during tissue differentiation.
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