| Literature DB >> 27891192 |
T A L Brevini1, G Pennarossa1, E F M Manzoni1, C E Gandolfi1, A Zenobi1, F Gandolfi1.
Abstract
In the presence of different environmental cues that are able to trigger specific responses, a given genotype has the ability to originate a variety of different phenotypes. This property is defined as plasticity and allows cell fate definition and tissue specialization. Fundamental epigenetic mechanisms drive these modifications in gene expression and include DNA methylation, histone modifications, chromatin remodeling, and microRNAs. Understanding these mechanisms can provide powerful tools to switch cell phenotype and implement cell therapy. Environmentally influenced epigenetic changes have also been associated to many diseases such as cancer and neurodegenerative disorders, with patients that do not respond, or only poorly respond, to conventional therapy. It is clear that disorders based on an individual's personal genomic/epigenomic profile can rarely be successfully treated with standard therapies due to genetic heterogeneity and epigenetic alterations and a personalized medicine approach is far more appropriate to manage these patients. We here discuss the recent advances in small molecule approaches for personalized medicine, drug targeting, and generation of new cells for medical application. We also provide prospective views of the possibility to directly convert one cell type into another, in a safe and robust way, for cell-based clinical trials and regenerative medicine.Entities:
Keywords: Epigenetic conversion; Epigenetics; Molecular medicine; Personalized medicine; Regenerative medicine; Small molecules; iPSCs
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27891192 PMCID: PMC5112765 DOI: 10.1186/s13148-016-0283-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Epigenetics ISSN: 1868-7075 Impact factor: 6.551
Mechanisms involved in epigenetic control and related epigenetic enzymes. References
| Mechanism | Writer | Eraser | Reader |
|---|---|---|---|
| DNA methylation | DNA methyltransferases (DNMT1, DNMT3) [ | DNA demethylation enzymes (TET) [ | Methyl-CpG binding domains (MECP2, MBD1, MBD2, and MBD4) [ |
| Histone lysine acetylation | Histone acetyltransferases (GCN5/PCAF, MYST, P300/CBP, SRC/p160) [ | Histone deacetylases (HDAC1, HDAC2, HDAC3, HDAC4, HDAC5, HDAC6, HDAC7, HDAC8, HDAC9, HDAC10, HDAC11); Sir2-like proteins (SIRT1, SIRT2, SIRT3, SIRT4, SIRT5, SIRT6, SIRT7) [ | Bromodomain, tandem PHD [ |
| Histone arginine methylation | Histone arginine methyltransferases (PRMT1, PRMT2, PRMT3, PRMT5, PRMT6, PRMT7, CARM1) [ | Histone arginine demethylase (bifunctional arginine demethylase and lysyl-hydroxylase JMJD6) [ | Tudor, ADD, WD40 [ |
| Histone lysine methylation | Histone lysine methyltransferases (EZH, SET1, SET2, SMYD, SUV39, SUV4-20, RIZ, SET8/PR-SET7, SET7/9, PRDM) [ | Histone lysine demethylases | Chromodomain, ADD, ankyrin, BAH, chromobarrel |
| Histone phosphorylation | Histone kinases (AGC, CaMK, CMGC, protein-tyrosine kinase, MEK) [ | Histone phosphatases | Chromoshadow, 14.3.3 proteins, BIR, BRCT [ |
| Histone lysine ubiquitination | Histone lysine ubiquitinases (E1 enzyme, E2 ubiquitin conjugases); E3 ubiquitin-protein ligases (HECT domain, RING finger domain) [ | Histone lysine deubiquitinases (UCH, USP, MJD, OTU, JAMM) [ | Unknown |
| Histone arginine citrullination | Histone arginine deiminases (PAD1, PAD2, PAD3, PAD4, PAD6) [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| Histone lysine biotinylation | Histone lysine biotinases (HLCS) [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| Histone lysine ribosylation | Histone lysine ribosylases (PARP1) [ | Histone lysine deribosylase (PARG) [ | Unknown |
List of nucleoside and non-nucleoside analog DNMT inhibitors
| Nucleoside analogs | Non-nucleoside analogs |
|---|---|
| 5-6-Dihydro-azacytidine | (−)-Epigallocatechin-3-galate |
| 5-Fluoro-2-deoxycytidine | Curcumin |
| Azacytidine | Mithramycin A |
| CP-4200 | Nanomycin A |
| Decitabine | Natural compounds: flavonoids |
| NPEOC-DAC | NSC-106084 |
| SGI-110 | NSC-14778 |
| Zebularine | PRIMA-1 |
| Psammaplin A | |
| RG-108 | |
| SGI-1027 | |
| Synthetic compounds: procaine |
List of HDACs and their current status in clinical trials
| Group | Example | Current status |
|---|---|---|
| Short-chain fatty acid | Valproic acid | Phase II CT |
| Phenyl butyrate | Phase II CT | |
| Pivanex | Phase II CT | |
| Hydroxamic acids | Vorinostat | FDA approved |
| Panobinostat | Phase III CT | |
| Belinostat | Phase II CT | |
| Abexinostat | Phase II CT | |
| Resminostat | Phase II CT | |
| Givinostat | Phase II CT | |
| Dacinostat | Phase II CT | |
| Pracinostat | Phase II CT | |
| Cyclic tetrapeptide | Romidepsin | FDA approved |
| Apicidin | Phase II CT | |
| Trapoxin A | No data | |
| Benzamide | Mocetinostat | Phase II CT |
| Entinostat | Phase II CT | |
| Rocilinostat | Phase II CT |
Fig. 1Schematic representation of epigenetic conversion experiments