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Ferritin Heavy Polypeptide-like 17 OKDB#: 4244
 Symbols: FTHL17 Species: human
 Synonyms: CT38,  Locus: Xp21 in Homo sapiens


For retrieval of Nucleotide and Amino Acid sequences please go to: OMIM Entrez Gene
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General Comment NCBI Summary: This gene is orthologous to a mouse gene that encodes a ferritin heavy polypeptide-like protein and shows testis-specific expression. [provided by RefSeq]
General function
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Cellular localization
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Ovarian function
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Expression regulated by
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Ovarian localization Oocyte
Comment The X-linked imprinted gene family Fthl17 shows predominantly female expression following the two-cell stage in mouse embryos. Kobayashi S et al. Differences between male and female mammals are initiated by embryonic differentiation of the gonad into either a testis or an ovary. However, this may not be the sole determinant. There are reports that embryonic sex differentiation might precede and be independent of gonadal differentiation, but there is little molecular biological evidence for this. To test for sex differences in early-stage embryos, we separated male and female blastocysts using newly developed non-invasive sexing methods for transgenic mice expressing green fluorescent protein and compared the gene-expression patterns. From this screening, we found that the Fthl17 (ferritin, heavy polypeptide-like 17) family of genes was predominantly expressed in female blastocysts. This comprises seven genes that cluster on the X chromosome. Expression analysis based on DNA polymorphisms revealed that these genes are imprinted and expressed from the paternal X chromosome as early as the two-cell stage. Thus, by the time zygotic genome activation starts there are already differences in gene expression between male and female mouse embryos. This discovery will be important for the study of early sex differentiation, as clearly these differences arise before gonadal differentiation.
Follicle stages
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Phenotypes
Mutations 0 mutations
Genomic Region show genomic region
Phenotypes and GWAS show phenotypes and GWAS
Links
OMIM (Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man: an excellent source of general gene description and genetic information.)
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created: March 3, 2010, 11:05 a.m. by: hsueh   email:
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last update: March 3, 2010, 11:08 a.m. by: hsueh    email:



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