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Journal ArticleDOI

Cancer as an epigenetic disease: DNA methylation and chromatin alterations in human tumours.

Manel Esteller, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2002 - 
- Vol. 196, Iss: 1, pp 1-7
TLDR
The aberrant CpG island methylation can be used as a biomarker of malignant cells and as a predictor of their behaviour, and may constitute a good target for future therapies.
Abstract
Cancer is an epigenetic disease at the same level that it can be considered a genetic disease. In fact, epigenetic changes, particularly DNA methylation, are susceptible to change and are excellent candidates to explain how certain environmental factors may increase the risk of cancer. The delicate organization of methylation and chromatin states that regulates the normal cellular homeostasis of gene expression patterns becomes unrecognizable in the cancer cell. The genome of the transformed cell undergoes simultaneously a global genomic hypomethylation and a dense hypermethylation of the CpG islands associated with gene regulatory regions. These dramatic changes may lead to chromosomal instability, activation of endogenous parasitic sequences, loss of imprinting, illegitimate expression, aneuploidy, and mutations, and may contribute to the transcriptional silencing of tumour suppressor genes. The hypermethylation-associated inactivation affects virtually all of the pathways in the cellular network, such as DNA repair (hMLH1, BRCA1, MGMT, em leader), the cell cycle (p16(INK4a), p14(ARF), p15(INK4b), ...), and apoptosis (DAPK, APAF-1, ...). The aberrant CpG island methylation can also be used as a biomarker of malignant cells and as a predictor of their behaviour, and may constitute a good target for future therapies.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Epigenetic regulation of gene expression: how the genome integrates intrinsic and environmental signals

TL;DR: Advances in the understanding of the mechanism and role of DNA methylation in biological processes are reviewed, showing that epigenetic mechanisms seem to allow an organism to respond to the environment through changes in gene expression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cell-free nucleic acids as biomarkers in cancer patients

TL;DR: Findings are discussed with a specific focus on the clinical utility of cell-free nucleic acids as blood biomarkers for cancer screening, prognosis and monitoring of the efficacy of anticancer therapies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Histone-deacetylase inhibitors: novel drugs for the treatment of cancer

TL;DR: The remarkable tumour specificity of these compounds, and their potency in vitro and in vivo, underscore the potential of HDAC inhibitors as exciting new agents for the treatment of cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Maternal nutrient supplementation counteracts bisphenol A-induced DNA hypomethylation in early development.

TL;DR: This paper showed that maternal exposure to bisphenol A (BPA), a high-production-volume chemical used in the manufacture of polycarbonate plastic, is associated with higher body weight, increased breast and prostate cancer, and altered reproductive function.
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The changing faces of glutathione, a cellular protagonist

TL;DR: The significance of GSH as a major factor in regulation of cell life, proliferation, and death, should be regarded as the integrated result of all these roles it can play.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Methylation-specific PCR: a novel PCR assay for methylation status of CpG islands

TL;DR: The use of MSP is demonstrated to identify promoter region hypermethylation changes associated with transcriptional inactivation in four important tumor suppressor genes (p16, p15, E-cadherin and von Hippel-Lindau) in human cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rett syndrome is caused by mutations in X-linked MECP2, encoding methyl-CpG-binding protein 2.

TL;DR: This study reports the first disease-causing mutations in RTT and points to abnormal epigenetic regulation as the mechanism underlying the pathogenesis of RTT.
Journal ArticleDOI

CpG-rich islands and the function of DNA methylation

Adrian Bird
- 01 May 1986 - 
TL;DR: It is likely that most vertebrate genes are associated with ‘HTF islands’—DNA sequences in which CpG is abundant and non-methylated; however, highly tissue-specific genes, though, usually lack islands.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inactivation of the DNA-Repair Gene MGMT and the Clinical Response of Gliomas to Alkylating Agents

TL;DR: Methylation of the MGMT promoter in gliomas is a useful predictor of the responsiveness of the tumors to alkylating agents and an independent and stronger prognostic factor than age, stage, tumor grade, or performance status.
Journal Article

A Gene Hypermethylation Profile of Human Cancer

TL;DR: An unusual view of the pervasiveness of DNA alterations, in this case an epigenetic change, in human cancer is provided and a powerful set of markers are provided to outline the disruption of critical pathways in tumorigenesis and for derivation of sensitive molecular detection strategies for virtually every human tumor type.
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