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    Kívánságlista
    Females Are Mosaics: X Inactivation and Sex Differences in Disease

    Females Are Mosaics by Migeon, Barbara;

    X Inactivation and Sex Differences in Disease

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    A beszerzés időigényét az eddigi tapasztalatokra alapozva adjuk meg. Azért becsült, mert a terméket külföldről hozzuk be, így a kiadó kiszolgálásának pillanatnyi gyorsaságától is függ. A megadottnál gyorsabb és lassabb szállítás is elképzelhető, de mindent megteszünk, hogy Ön a lehető leghamarabb jusson hozzá a termékhez.

    A termék adatai:

    • Kiadás sorszáma 2
    • Kiadó OUP USA
    • Megjelenés dátuma 2013. december 5.

    • ISBN 9780199927531
    • Kötéstípus Keménykötés
    • Terjedelem328 oldal
    • Méret 163x236x25 mm
    • Súly 612 g
    • Nyelv angol
    • 0

    Kategóriák

    Rövid leírás:

    This is the only book about the X chromosome as a key to female development and the role of X-related factors in the etiology of sex differences in human disease. This new edition reflects research advances from the six years since the widely praised first edition.

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    Hosszú leírás:

    Women can be described as genetic mosaics because they have two distinctly different types of cells throughout their bodies. Unlike males, who have one X chromosome, females have two X chromosomes in every cell. Much has been written about the Y chromosome and its role in inducing maleness. This is the only book about the X chromosome as a key to female development and the role of X-related factors in the etiology of sex differences in human disease. This new edition reflects research advances from the six years since the widely praised first edition. New advances include knowledge of species differences in mammalian X inactivation processes and silencing of the inactive X chromosome.

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    Tartalomjegyzék:

    Introduction
    Part I Background
    Chapter 1 Sex Differences in Disease
    1.1. Males More Vulnerable at Every Age
    1.2. Vulnerability of Males Leads to Sex-Specific Disease
    1.3. Summary and Speculations
    Chapter 2 Evolution of the Human Sex Chromosomes and a Portrait of the Human X
    2.1. Chromosomal Basis of Sex Determination
    2.2. The Human Sex Chromosomes Evolved from Reptilian Autosomes
    2.3. Degeneration of the Y Chromosome
    2.4. Ohno's Law and the Conservation of the Original X
    2.5. Residual Homology and the Pseudoautosomal Regions
    2.6. Genetic Portrait of the Human X
    2.7. Summary and Speculations
    Chapter 3 X Chromosome Dosage Compensation: An Overview
    3.1. X Chromosome Dosage Compensation
    3.2. Heterochromatin and Chromosome Silencing
    3.3. Role in Sex Determination
    3.4. Mechanisms of Dosage Compensation in Other Organisms
    3.5. Mechanisms of Dosage Compensation in Mammals
    3.6. Summary and Speculations
    Chapter 4 The Discovery of X Chromosome Inactivation
    4.1. The Lyon Hypothesis
    4.2. General Scheme of Mammalian Dosage Compensation
    4.3. Summary and Speculations
    Chapter 5 Experimental Models for X Inactivation Studies
    5.1. Spontaneous Human Mutations that Interfere with Inactivation
    5.2. X-Linked Protein Variants Distinguish Parental Origin of X Chromosomes
    5.3. Characterizing the Inactive X in Human Cell Cultures and Clones
    5.4. Mouse-Human Hybrids Separate Inactive from Active X
    5.5. Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells for Manipulating the Early Steps in X Inactivation
    5.6. Transgenic Mice as a Functional Assay
    5.7. Assays for X Inactivation Patterns in Heterozygotes
    5.8. Summary and Speculations
    Part II. Themes and Variations of X Inactivation
    Chapter 6 Theme 1: The Initial Steps-Creating the Active and Inactive X
    6.1. Characteristics of the Inactive X Chromosome
    6.2. Time of Initiation in the Embryo
    6.3. Cis Inactivation
    6.4. The Master Control Region: XIC and Xist
    6.5. Silencing the Inactive X Chromosome
    6.6. Single Active X Versus X Inactivation
    6.7. Choosing the Active X Chromosome
    6.8. Summary and Speculations
    Chapter 7 Theme 2: Subsequent Steps-Spreading and Maintaining Inactivation
    7.1. Spreading Inactivation by Modifying Chromatin
    7.2. Maintaining Inactivation by DNA Methylation of CpG Islands
    7.3. Escape from Inactivation
    7.4. Transient X Inactivation in Germ Cells
    7.5. Induced X Reactivation in Placental Cells
    7.6. Role of DNA Replication in X Inactivation
    7.7. Summary and Speculations
    Chapter 8 Variations 1: Evolution of the X Inactivation Center
    8.1. Variations on the Themes of X Inactivation
    8.2. Divergence in the Physical Map
    8.3. The Effect of Map Changes on X Inactivation in Mouse and Man
    Chapter 9 Variations 2: Stability of the Inactive X
    9.1. Stability of X Inactivation & DNA Methylation
    9.2 Genes that Escape Inactivation
    9.3. Summary and Speculations
    Chapter 10 Variations 3: Choice of Active X
    10.1. Primary Nonrandom X Inactivation
    10.2. Paternal X Inactivation
    10.3. Relationship of Paternal X Inactivation to Genomic Imprinting
    10.4. Does Antisense Transcription Have a Role?
    10.5. Evolution and Tinkering
    10.6. Effect of Inactivation Timing
    10.7. Summary and Speculations
    Part III. Medical Consequences of X Inactivation
    Chapter 11 The Single Active X
    11.1. Coping with a Monosomy X
    11.2. Dosage Compensation of the Active X
    11.3. Sex Differences in Susceptibility to Disease
    11.4. Viability of Turner Syndrome, Klinefelter Syndrome, and X Chromosome Aneuploidy
    11.5. X Deletions, Ring X Chromosomes, X Duplications, and Functional Disomy
    11.6. X/Autosome Translocations and Spreading of Inactivation
    11.7. Polyploidy and the Choice of Active X
    11.8. Summary and Speculations
    Chapter 12 Mosaicism
    12.1. The X-Linked Phenotype Is Dominant at the Cellular Level
    12.2. Females Are Mosaics
    12.3. Interaction between Mosaic Cell Populations
    12.4. Skewing of X Inactivation Patterns
    12.5. Effect of X Inactivation on Clinical Phenotype
    12.6. "Manifesting" Heterozygotes
    12.7. Summary and Speculations
    Chapter 13 Epimutations, Chromatin Disorders and Sex Differences in Phenotype
    13.1 Epimutations Usually Cause Somatic Diseases
    13.2 Epimutations in Imprinting Disorders
    13.3 Epigenetic Regulation of Autosomal Gene Expression by Sex Chromosomes
    13.4 Disorders of the Epigenetic Machinery
    13.5 Sex Differences in Manifestations of Chromatin Disorders
    13.6 Treatment of Chromatin Disorders
    13.7 Summary and Speculations
    Chapter 14 Determinants of Female Phenotypes
    14.1. The Dynamic Effect of Interacting Cell Populations on the Health of Females
    14.2. The Effect of X Inactivation on Normal Female Phenotype and Cell Diversity
    14.3. Epilogue
    Appendix A Descriptions of Model X-linked and Other Relevant Diseases
    Appendix B Sex Chromosome Aneuploidy, Polyploidy, and Parthenogenetic Conceptuses
    Appendix C Effect of X Inactivation on Phenotype and Cell Selection in X-linked Disorders
    Glossary
    References
    Index

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