| Literature DB >> 29149060 |
Lata Balakrishnan1, Barry Milavetz2.
Abstract
It is increasingly clear that DNA viruses exploit cellular epigenetic processes to control their life cycles during infection. This review will address epigenetic regulation in members of the polyomaviruses, adenoviruses, human papillomaviruses, hepatitis B, and herpes viruses. For each type of virus, what is known about the roles of DNA methylation, histone modifications, nucleosome positioning, and regulatory RNA in epigenetic regulation of the virus infection will be discussed. The mechanisms used by certain viruses to dysregulate the host cell through manipulation of epigenetic processes and the role of cellular cofactors such as BRD4 that are known to be involved in epigenetic regulation of host cell pathways will also be covered. Specifically, this review will focus on the role of epigenetic regulation in maintaining viral episomes through the generation of chromatin, temporally controlling transcription from viral genes during the course of an infection, regulating latency and the switch to a lytic infection, and global dysregulation of cellular function.Entities:
Keywords: ChIP-Seq; DNA methylation; DNA virus; epigenetic; gene expression; histone modifications; latency; nucleosomes; regulation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29149060 PMCID: PMC5707553 DOI: 10.3390/v9110346
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Functional outcomes of epigenetic regulation.
| Epigenetic Process | Target | Function |
|---|---|---|
| DNA Methylation | DNA in cell or viral epigenome | Typically silence genes |
| Nucleosome Location | Cellular and Viral Chromatin | Nucleosome position controls access to DNA sequences |
| Histone Modification | Cellular and Viral Chromatin | Histone acetylation and methylation on H3K4/H3K36 association with activation of transcription, methylation on H3K9 and H3K27 is associated with repression, methylation of H4K20 could result in either activation or repression |
| Histone Variants | Cellular and Viral Chromatin | Not yet well understood for viruses |
| miRNA | Cellular and Viral Chromatin | Modify gene expression at the level of translation |
Figure 1Schematic representation of the position of nucleosome in the major forms of SV40 chromatin present in virion and minichromosomes isolated at 48 h. Location of nucleosomes in SV40 chromatin from disrupted virion (Top) and minichromosomes isolated at 48 h post infection (Bottom) are shown. The regulatory sequences provide visual alignment for the position of the identified location of nucleosomes.
Figure 2Schematic of protocol for immune selection fragmentation followed by immunoprecipitation (ISFIP) and next-generation sequencing (NGS).