| Literature DB >> 31711545 |
Dandan Zong1,2, Xiangming Liu1,2, Jinhua Li1,2, Ruoyun Ouyang1,2, Ping Chen3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Exposure to cigarette smoke (CS) is a major threat to human health worldwide. It is well established that smoking increases the risk of respiratory diseases, cardiovascular diseases and different forms of cancer, including lung, liver, and colon. CS-triggered inflammation is considered to play a central role in various pathologies by a mechanism that stimulates the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines. During this process, epigenetic alterations are known to play important roles in the specificity and duration of gene transcription. MAIN TEXT: Epigenetic alterations include three major modifications: DNA modifications via methylation; various posttranslational modifications of histones, namely, methylation, acetylation, phosphorylation, and ubiquitination; and non-coding RNA sequences. These modifications work in concert to regulate gene transcription in a heritable fashion. The enzymes that regulate these epigenetic modifications can be activated by smoking, which further mediates the expression of multiple inflammatory genes. In this review, we summarize the current knowledge on the epigenetic alterations triggered by CS and assess how such alterations may affect smoking-mediated inflammatory responses.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; Epigenetic; Histone modification; Inflammation; LncRNA; miRNA
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31711545 PMCID: PMC6844059 DOI: 10.1186/s13072-019-0311-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epigenetics Chromatin ISSN: 1756-8935 Impact factor: 4.954
Fig. 1Epigenetic mechanisms. a DNA methylation. DNA methylation is catalyzed by DNA methyl transferases (DNMTs). DNA methylation involves the covalent transfer of a methyl group from S-adenosyl methionine (SAM) to 5′ position of cytosine residues in CG dinucleotides. DNA demethylation involves ten-eleven translocation (TET) proteins. TETs initiate DNA demethylation by oxidizing 5-methylcytosine (5mC) to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), which can be further oxidized to 5-formylcytosine (5fC) and 5-carboxylcytosine (5caC). 5fC and 5caC can be recognized and excised by thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG), and the residual abasic site is repaired as unmodified C by base excision repair (BER) pathway to complete “active” demethylation. Furthermore, oxygen and Fe(II) are indispensable for the TET enzymes to perform the successive oxidation of 5mC, 5hmC and 5fC. b Histone posttranscriptional modifications. Histone modification is regulated by opposing enzymes. Histone acetylation is mediated by histone acetyltransferases (HATs) and deacetylation by histone deacetylases (HDACs). Methylation is mediated by histone methyltransferase (HMTs) and demethylation by histone demethylases (HDMs). Phosphorylation is mediated by phosphorylase kinases (PKs). Ubiquitination is carried out through three main enzymatic reactions performed stepwise by ubiquitin-activating enzyme (E1), ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (E2), and ubiquitin ligase (E3) consecutively; deubiquitination is mediated by deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs). c The biogenesis of miRNA and lncRNA. The miRNA is transcribed to create the primary miRNA (pri‐miRNA) by RNA polymerase II (RNAPII). Following cleaved by the Drosha and DRCG8, precursor miRNA (pre‐miRNA) is exported from the nucleus by exportin 5. Then, Dicer and TAR RNA‐binding protein (TRBP) will further process the molecule and form a double-stranded miRNA: miRNA duplex. One strand of the duplex, together with the argonaute (AGO) protein and the target messenger RNA, is incorporated in the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) and subsequently targets mRNAs for degradation or translational repression. The lncRNA is transcribed mostly by RNAPII and its biogenesis process is similar to miRNA
The changes of DNA methylation profiles affected by CS
| Sample size | Population | Tissue for DNA methylation analysis | Smoking status | Main result | References | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 596 | Chinese population | Whole blood | Current smoke | 318 CpG sites were differentially methylated due to cigarette smoking. | Zhu et al. [ | 2016 |
| 745 | European women | Whole blood | Current smoke | 461 CpG sites were aberrant methylated due to cigarette smoking. Of them, 448 CpG sites were hypomethylated | Guida et al. [ | 2015 |
| Former smoke | The methylation of 751 CpG sites were changed the recoded smoking status. Of them, 602 CpG sites reverted back to that of never smokers from up to 35 years after smoking cessation. 149 CpG sites remained differentially methylated > 35 years after smoking | |||||
| 123 | Arab population | Whole blood | Current smoke | Aberrant methylation was detected due to tobacco smoking. The exact number of CpG sites was not mentioned | Zaghlool et al. [ | 2015 |
| 111 | African American women | Peripheral blood mononuclear cells | Current smoke | 910 loci were found to be differentially methylated in smokers | Dogan et al. [ | 2014 |
| 192 | South Asian and European men | Whole blood | Current smoke | 29 CpG sites at 18 unique loci were differential methylated in smokers | Elliott et al. [ | 2014 |
| 180 | Italian population | Peripheral white blood cells | Current smoke/former smoke | 17 and 19 loci in the breast cancer and colon cancer were differentially methylated between smokers, former smokers and never smokers. In former smokers, methylation levels at AHRR, 2q37 and 6p21 loci returned to the levels of nonsmokers with increasing time from cessation and those who had smoked more intensively had methylation levels that were closer to that of current smokers | Shenker et al. [ | 2013 |
| 1793 | Augsburg population | Whole blood | Current smoke/FORMER smoke | 972 CpG sites were differentially methylated after smoking. Of which, 187 CpG sites were differentially methylated in current smokers. | Zeilinger et al. [ | 2013 |
| 98 | African Americans | Lymphocyte cells | Current smoke | Aberrant methylation was detected due to tobacco smoking. The authors listed 30 most significant methylated CpG sites without mentioning the exact number of methylated CpG sites | Philibert et al. [ | 2013 |
| 972 | African Americans | Peripheral leukocytes | Current smoke | 15 autosomal DNAm sites were significantly associated with current smoking using a Bonferroni corrected | Sun et al. [ | 2013 |
| 20 | Hispanic newborns | CD4+ cells from cord blood | In utero exposure to maternal tobacco smoke | 10,381 CpG sites were differentially methylated by tobacco smoking. Of them, 557 differentially methylated regions were overrepresented in important regulatory regions, including enhancers | Howe et al. [ | 2019 |
| 1062 | Norwegian newborns | Cord blood | In utero exposure to maternal tobacco smoke | Differential DNA methylation of 26 CpG sites mapped to 10 genes were found in newborns born to smoking mothers compared to nonsmoking mothers | Joubert et al. [ | 2012 |
| 1042 | Norwegian newborns | Cord blood | In utero exposure to maternal tobacco smoke | Maternal smoking affected DNA methylation of 26 CpG sites that mapped to 10 genes in newborn cord blood if the mother smokes past 18 weeks in pregnancy, whereas significant effects on methylation were not observed for mothers that quit before 18 gestational weeks | Joubert et al. [ | 2014 |
The role of CS-induced aberrant DNA methylation in inflammation
| Genes/CpG sites | Changes by CS | Functions on inflammation | Mechanism | Disease | References | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypermethylation [ | Pro-inflammation | Associated with the level of CRP | COPD | Siedlinski et al. [ | 2012 | |
| Hypermethylation [ | Pro-inflammation | Associated with the level of CRP | COPD | Siedlinski et al. [ | 2012 | |
| Hypermethylation [ | Pro-inflammation | Associated with the level of CRP | COPD | Siedlinski et al. [ | 2012 | |
| N/A | Anti-inflammation | Hypomethylation of the CpG site was associated with higher | CHD | Ligthart et al. [ | 2016 | |
| N/A | Anti-inflammation | Hypomethylation of the CpG site was associated with higher | CHD | Ligthart et al. [ | 2016 | |
| Hypomethylation [ | Anti-inflammation | Hypomethylation of the CpG site was associated with higher | CHD | Ligthart et al. [ | 2016 | |
| cg03636183 in F2RL3 | Hypomethylation [ | Pro-inflammation | Increase IL-18 levels | Hypertension | Jhun et al. [ | 2017 |
| DNMT1 | Upregulation [ | Pro-inflammation | Increase methylation level of the | Atherosclerosis | Yu et al. [ | 2016 |
| DNMT1 | Upregulation [ | Pro-inflammation | Regulates IL-6 and TGFβ1; meanwhile, be activated by IL-6 and TGFβ | Benign prostatic hyperplasia | Xu et al. [ | 2017 |
| DNMT1 | Upregulation [ | Pro-inflammation | Be activated by IL-1β via MAPK and NF-κB pathways. | Benign meningiomas | Wang et al. [ | 2016 |
| TET1 | N/A | Pro-inflammation | TET1 knockdown reduced IL-6 and TNF-α levels through downregulating NF-κB signaling pathway | Periodontal diseases | Huang et al. [ | 2019 |
| TET2 | N/A | Pro-inflammation | Activate the NF-κB signaling pathway | Dental pulp inflammation | Wang et al. [ | 2018 |
AML acute myeloid leukemia, ARHH aryl hydrocarbon receptor repressor, CHD coronary heart disease, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, CRP C-reactive protein, DNMT DNA methyltransferase, F2RL3 coagulation factor II (thrombin) receptor-like 3 gene, JAK3 Janus kinase 3, KRT1 keratin 1, MAPK mitogen‐activated protein kinase, NF-κB nuclear factor kappa B, PPAR peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor, RUNX3 runt-related transcription factor 3, SOCS3 suppressor of cytokine signaling 3, TET Tet-eleven translocation protein, TGFβ transforming growth factor beta 1, TNF-α tumor necrosis factor α, TUBB tubulin beta
Studies reporting aberrant HATs/HDACs induced by CS in inflammation
| HATs/HDACs | Changes by CS | Functions on inflammation | Mechanism | Disease | References | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CBP/p300 | Upregulation [ | Pro-inflammation | Increase acetylation of histones (H3/H4) and NF-κB | COPD | Rajendrasozhan et al. [ | 2009 |
| HDAC1 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Decrease level of acetylated H3K9 | COPD | Chen et al. [ | 2015 |
| HDAC2 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Inhibit IL-17A Suppress the phosphorylation of Akt Inhibit NF-κB | COPD Asthma COPD | Lai et al. [ Xia et al. [ To et al. [ | 2018 2018 2017 |
| HDAC3 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Repress synthesis of NF-κB -driven inflammatory cytokine | COPD | Winkler et al. [ | 2012 |
| HDAC4 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Repress c-Jun and IL-17A | COPD | Lu et al. [ | 2015 |
| HDAC5 | Downregulation [ | Pro-inflammation | Activate NF-κB | Chronic inflammatory diseases Mycoplasma pneumoniae pneumonia | Poralla et al. [ Zhao et al. [ | 2015 2019 |
| HDAC6 | Upregulation [ Activation [ | Pro-inflammation | Promote the increase of matrix metalloproteinase 9 expression and activate NF-κB by inducing IĸB phosphorylation Promote the phosphorylation of p38 MAPK | Acute lung injury Brain inflammation | Liu et al. [ Song et al. [ | 2019 2019 |
| HDAC7 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Increase histone deacetylation of memory T lymphocytes | Asthma | Zhang et al. [ | 2015 |
| HDAC8 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation Pro-inflammation | Promote the acetylation modification of IFNβ1 promoter, thus selectively increasing innate IFN-β production Increase the production of IL-1β, TNFα, and IL-6 | Asthma Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis | Meng et al. [ Li et al. [ | 2016 2015 |
| HDAC9 | N/A | Anti-inflammation | Increase histone deacetylation of memory T lymphocytes | Asthma | Zhang et al. [ | 2015 |
| HDAC10 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Increase histone deacetylation of memory T lymphocytes | Asthma | Zhang et al. [ | 2015 |
| HDAC11 | N/A | Anti-inflammation | Increase histone deacetylation of memory T lymphocytes | Asthma | Zhang et al. [ | 2015 |
| SIRT1 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Deacetylate the RelA/p65 subunit of NF-κβ and attenuate NF-κB-mediated gene transcription | Chronic inflammatory diseases | Schug et al. [ | 2010 |
| SIRT2 | N/A | Anti-inflammation | Deacetylate the RelA/p65 subunit of NF-κB at Lys310 and inhibit NF-κβ signaling | Inflammatory bowel disease | Lo et al. [ | 2014 |
| SIRT3 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Ameliorate NLRP3 inflammasome activation Decrease the expression levels of NF-κB, HMGB1, c-Jun, c-Fos, COX2, TNF-α, IL-1β and IL-6 | Hyperlipidaemia Chronic kidney disease | Liu et al. [ Qiao et al. [ | 2018 2018 |
| SIRT4 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Suppress NF-κB activating via inhibiting the degradation of IκBα | COPD | Chen et al. [ | 2014 |
| SIRT5 | Downregulation [ | Pro-inflammation | Compete with SIRT2 to interact with NF-κB p65 to block the deacetylation of p65 by SIRT2, leading to increased acetylation of p65 and the activation of NF-κB pathway | Sepsis | Qin et al. [ | 2017 |
| SIRT6 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Interact with p65/RelA bound to the NF-κβ promoter region and repress transcriptional activity | Inflammatory vascular diseases | Lappas M. [ | 2012 |
| SIRT7 | N/A | Anti-inflammation | Deacetylate p53, leading to inactivation of p53 | Heart diseases | Vakhrusheva et al. [ | 2008 |
CBP cAMP-response element binding protein, COX2 cyclooxygenase-2, CS cigarette smoke, HAT histone acetyltransferases, HDACs histone deacetylases, HMGB1 high mobility group box 1, IFNβ1 interferon beta 1, IκBα inhibitory kappa B kinase α, IL interleukin, NLRP3 NOD-like receptor family, pyrin domain containing 3, SIRT sirtuin
Implications of CS-related microRNAs on inflammation
| miRNAs | Changes by CS | Functions on inflammation | Mechanism | Disease | References | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Let-7c | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Suppress NF-κB signaling Suppress STAT3 signaling | Endometritis COPD | Zhao et al. [ Yu et al. [ | 2019 2016 |
| miR-16 | Upregulation [ | Pro-inflammation | Upregulated by NF-κB | Gastric cancer | Shin et al. [ | |
| miR-21 | Upregulation [ | Pro-inflammation | Upregulated by NF-κB | Gastric cancer | Shin et al. [ | |
| miR-24 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Suppress TNF-α, IL-1β and NF-κB | IPF | Ebrahimpour et al. [ | 2019 |
| miR-29b | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Reduce VEGF-A expression; meanwhile upregulated by NF-κB inhibitor | Breast cancer | Malik et al. [ | 2018 |
| miR-30 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Inhibit NF-κB | N/A | Izzotti et al. [ | 2009 |
| miR-132 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Repress SOCS5 expression | COPD | Diao et al. [ | 2018 |
| miR-135b | Upregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Upregulated by IL-1R1 and directly targets IL-1R1 in a negative regulatory feedback loop | N/A | Halappanavar et al. [ | 2013 |
| miR-145 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Suppress Kruppel-like 5 and NF-κB | COPD | Dang et al. [ | 2019 |
| miR-146a | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Reduce CS-induced COX-2 production. | N/A | Zago et al. [ | |
| miR-149 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Inhibit the TLR-4/NF-κB signaling pathway | COPD | Shen et al. [ | 2017 |
| miR-150 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Inactivate NF-κB | COPD | Xue et al. [ | 2018 |
| miR-181 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Inhibit CCN1 | COPD | Du et al. [ | 2017 |
| miR-195 | Upregulation [ | Pro-inflammation Anti-inflammation | Elevate Akt phosphorylation by suppressing PHLPP2 expression Inhibit NF-κB and JNK signaling by repressing Smad7 | COPD Ulcerative colitis | Gu et al. [ Chen et al | 2018 2015 |
| miR-200 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Suppressed by NF-κB | Lung cancer | Zhao et al. [ | 2013 |
| miR-212 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Promote the phosphorylation of Akt. | COPD | Jia et al. [ | 2018 |
| miR-218 | Downregulation [ | Anti-inflammation | Inactivate NF-κB | COPD | Conickx et al. [ | 2017 |
| miR-223 | Downregulation [ Upregulation [ | Anti-inflammation Pro-inflammation | Inhibit NF-κB by targeting IL-1 receptor-associated kinase 1 Downregulate NLRP3 Suppress HDAC2 | Low back pain Inflammatory bowel disease COPD | Wang et al. [ Neudecker et al. [ Leuenberger et al. [ | 2018 2017 2016 |
| miR-320 | N/A | Anti-inflammation | Inhibit NF-κB | COPD | Faiz et al. [ | 2019 |
CCN1 a member of CCN family, IPF idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, PHLPP2 PH domain and leucine-rich repeat protein phosphatase 2, STAT3 signal transducer and activator of transcription 3, TLR toll-like receptor, VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor. JNK c-Jun N-terminal kinase
CS‐regulated lncRNAs and their role in inflammation
| LncRNAs | Changes by CS | Functions on inflammation | Mechanism | Disease | References | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HOTAIR | Upregulation [ | Pro-inflammation | Promote TNF-α production by activating NF-κB signaling Promote the expression of protein kinase resource, TNF-α and IL-6 Promote the expression of IL‐6, IL‐1β, COX2, and TNF-α Upregulated by pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-6 | Sepsis Keratinocyte injury Atherosclerosis Lung cancer | Wu et al. [ Liu and Zhang [ Liu et al. [ Liu et al. [ | 2016 2018 2019 2015 |
| MALAT1 | Upregulation [ | Pro-inflammation Anti-inflammation | Activate p38 MAPK/NF-κB Increase serum amyloid antigen 3 Upregulated by pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-6 Inhibit the DNA binding activity of NF-κB | Sepsis Diabetes Sepsis N/A | Chen et al. [ Puthanveetil et al. [ Zhuang et al. [ Zhao et al. [ | 2018 2015 2017 2016 |
| CCAT1 | Upregulation [ | Pro-inflammation | Trigger TNF-α, IFN-γ expression by targeting miR-185-3p, meanwhile upregulated by TNF-α | Inflammatory bowel disease | Ma et al. [ | 2019 |
CCAT1 colon cancer-associated transcript-1, HOTAIR Hox transcript antisense intergenic RNA, MALAT1 metastasis associated in lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1