hi continue visiting your profile
user

Login

Email

Password

Create account
Forget password
do you want to Log Out ?
AnyGenes

Epigenetic Regulation

Epigenetic corresponds to the modifications of gene expression which do not arise from modifications of the DNA sequence. The most important events are : DNA methylation at CpG islets and post-translational modification of histones (1).

In normal cells, these modifications allow to modulate gene expression and numerous factors are involved in these mechanisms (DNA methyltransferase, histone deacetylase and histone acetyltransferase, sirtuin, aurora kinase,...) (2,3). All these factors interact together to modulate gene expression, which notably lead to cell differenciation of totipotent cell (3).

Epigenetic events and cancer

In cancer, tumor cells modulate epigenetic factors to their advantage. These mechanisms lead to transcription activation of genes involved in signaling pathways, ordinary inactive (migration, invasion, cell proliferation, ...) (5).

Epigenetics is involved in many mechanisms. AnyGenes® offers you the possibility to explore epigenetic regulation signaling pathways by qPCR arrays or DNA methylation by pyrosequencing.

Epigenetic control of adult stem cell function(4)

These activations are due to global DNA hypomethylation with a localised hypermethylation (tumor suppressor genes and cell cycle checkpoints). Histones are also modified in order to let the chromatin more accessible (5).

Epigenetic events are strongly involved in the cell carcinogenesis and cell invasion in new tissues by metastasis process.

AnyGenes® offers you the possibility to perform a high-throughput analysis of epigenetic regulation pathway in order to understand and identify involved signaling pathways in only one transcriptomic analysis !

  1. Metabolic control of epigenetics in cancer. Nature (2016) 16: 694-707. Kinnaird A, Zhao S, Wellen KE and Michelakis ED.
  2. Epigenetic regulation and cancer (Review). Oncology reports (2014) 31: 523-532. Chen QW, Zhu XY, Li YY and Meng ZQ.
  3. Histone Modifiers in Cancer: Friends or Foes? Genes & Cancer (2011) 2(6): 631-647. Cohen I, Poreba E, Kamieniarz K, and Schneider R.
  4. Epigenetic control of adult stem cell function. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol. (2016) 17: 194-200. Avgustinova A, Benitah SA.
  5. Epigenetics in cancer. Carcinogenesis (2010) 31(1): 27-36. Sharma S, Kelly TK and Jones PA