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Showing papers by "George L. Mutter published in 1993"


Journal Article
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that a biparental genome may be required for expression of the reciprocal IGF2/H19 imprint, and biparentAL expression may be a normal feature of some imprinted genes in specific cell types.
Abstract: Human uniparental gestations such as gynogenetic ovarian teratomas and androgenetic complete hydatidiform moles provide a model to evaluate the integrity of parent-specific gene expression--i.e., imprinting--in the absence of a complementary parental genetic contribution. We studied expression, in these tissues, of the oppositely imprinted genes H19, which is an embryonic nontranslated RNA, and insulin-like growth factor type 2 (IGF2). Normal gestations only express H19 from the maternal allele and express IGF2 from the paternal allele, whereas neither is expressed from the maternal genome of gynogenetic gestations, and both are expressed from the paternal genome of androgenetic gestations. Coexpression of H19 and IGF2 in the androgenetic tissues was in a single population of cells, mononuclear trophoblast--the same cell type expressing these genes in biparental placentas. These results demonstrate that a biparental genome may be required for expression of the reciprocal IGF2/H19 imprint. Alternatively, biparental expression may be a normal feature of some imprinted genes in specific cell types. Additional experiments with other imprinted genes will clarify whether this reflects global failure of the imprinting process or a change specific to the IGF2/H19 locus.

77 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the primary sex ratio, the relative abundance of X and Y chromosomebearing sperm, in unselected sperm and in sperm selected by swim-up or Sephadex filtration (SpermPrep column), was established.

55 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Iwaoki Y1, Matsuda H1, George L. Mutter1, Watrin F1, Debra J. Wolgemuth1 
TL;DR: Quantitative evaluation suggested that c-abl mRNA levels in oocytes are at least an order of magnitude lower than those of c-mos transcripts, which also accumulates in growing and fully grown oocytes.

35 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The hypothesis that presence of a Y chromosome in a complete hydatidiform mole confers an increased risk for developing metastatic gestational trophoblastic tumor is evaluated.

28 citations