Literature DB >> 17951162

DNA methylation in states of cell physiology and pathology.

Anetta Sulewska1, Wieslawa Niklinska, Miroslaw Kozlowski, Lukasz Minarowski, Wojciech Naumnik, Jacek Niklinski, Katarzyna Dabrowska, Lech Chyczewski.   

Abstract

DNA methylation is one of epigenetic mechanisms regulating gene expression. The methylation pattern is determined during embryogenesis and passed over to differentiating cells and tissues. In a normal cell, a significant degree of methylation is characteristic for extragenic DNA (cytosine within the CG dinucleotide) while CpG islands located in gene promoters are unmethylated, except for inactive genes of the X chromosome and the genes subjected to genomic imprinting. The changes in the methylation pattern, which may appear as the organism age and in early stages of cancerogenesis, may lead to the silencing of over ninety endogenic genes. It has been found, that these disorders consist not only of the methylation of CpG islands, which are normally unmethylated, but also of the methylation of other dinucleotides, e.g. CpA. Such methylation has been observed in non-small cell lung cancer, in three regions of the exon 5 of the p53 gene (so-called "non-CpG" methylation). The knowledge of a normal methylation process and its aberrations appeared to be useful while searching for new markers enabling an early detection of cancer. With the application of the Real-Time PCR technique (using primers for methylated and unmethylated sequences) five new genes which are potential biomarkers of lung cancer have been presented.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17951162

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Folia Histochem Cytobiol        ISSN: 0239-8508            Impact factor:   1.698


  9 in total

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Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2022-08-11       Impact factor: 3.231

8.  Analysis of age-related global DNA methylation in chicken.

Authors:  Magdalena Gryzinska; Ewa Blaszczak; Aneta Strachecka; Grazyna Jezewska-Witkowska
Journal:  Biochem Genet       Date:  2013-04-04       Impact factor: 1.890

9.  Chaetocin Improves Pig Cloning Efficiency by Enhancing Epigenetic Reprogramming and Autophagic Activity.

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  9 in total

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