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Parent-of-origin effects comprise a range of genetic and epigenetic mechanisms of inheritance. Recently, detection of such effects implicated epigenetic mechanisms in the etiology of multiple sclerosis (MS), a chronic inflammatory disease of the central nervous system. We here sought to dissect the magnitude and the type of parent-of-origin effects in the pathogenesis of experimental neuroinflammation under controlled environmental conditions. We investigated inheritance of an MS-like disease in rat, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), using a backcross strategy designed to identify the parental origin of disease-predisposing alleles. A striking 37-54% of all detected disease-predisposing loci depended on parental transmission. Additionally, the Y chromosome from the susceptible strain contributed to disease susceptibility. Accounting for parent-of-origin enabled more powerful and precise identification of novel risk factors and increased the disease variance explained by the identified factors by 2-4-fold. The majority of loci displayed an imprinting-like pattern whereby a gene expressed only from the maternal or paternal copy exerts an effect. In particular, a locus on chromosome 6 comprises a well-known cluster of imprinted genes including the paternally expressed Dlk1, an atypical Notch ligand. Disease-predisposing alleles at the locus conferred lower Dlk1 expression in rats and, together with data from transgenic overexpressing Dlk1 mice, demonstrate that reduced Dlk1 drives more severe disease and modulates adaptive immune reactions in EAE. Our findings suggest a significant epigenetic contribution to the etiology of EAE. Incorporating these effects enables more powerful and precise identification of novel risk factors with diagnostic and prognostic implications for complex disease.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004265 | DOI Listing |
Here, we present a novel approach to estimate the degree to which the phenotypic effect of a DNA locus is attributable to four components: alleles in the child (direct genetic effects), alleles in the mother and the father (indirect genetic effects), or is dependent upon the parent from which it is inherited (parent-of-origin, PofO effects). Applying our model, JODIE, to 30,000 child-mother-father trios with phased DNA information from the Estonian Biobank (EstBB) and the Norwegian Mother, Father, Child Cohort (MoBa), we jointly estimate the phenotypic variance attributable to these four effects unbiased of assortative mating (AM) for height, body mass index (BMI) and childhood educational test score (EA). For all three traits, direct effects make the largest contribution to the genetic effect variance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
August 2025
National Key Laboratory for Swine Genetic Improvement and Germplasm innovation Technology, Jiangxi Agricultural University, Nanchang, China.
Parent-of-origin effects refer to the phenomenon whereby the gene expression and corresponding phenotype are influenced by paternal or maternal origin, and uncovering the underlying regulatory mechanisms remains a challenging task. To address this, we designed three sets of trio families by crossing divergent pig breeds to generate sufficient heterozygous loci and collected back fat and longissimus dorsi for multi-omics sequencing. Parental phases of sequencing reads are efficiently determined by leveraging long-read sequencing technology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
August 2025
Department of Computational Biology, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Parent-of-origin effects (POEs) occur when the effect of a genetic variant depends on its parental origin. Traditionally linked to genomic imprinting, POEs are believed to occur due to parental conflict over resource allocation to offspring, resulting in opposing parental influences. Despite their importance, POEs remain underexplored in complex traits, owing to the lack of parental genomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Genomics
July 2025
Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, 47907, USA.
In mammals, genomic imprinting restricts the expression of a subset of genes from one of the two parental alleles. The process is regulated by imprinting control regions (ICRs) dispersed across autosomal chromosomal DNA. An unresolved question is how to discover candidate ICRs across the entire canine genome.
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