| Literature DB >> 34082816 |
Xena Giada Pappalardo1,2, Viviana Barra3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: DNA methylation is an epigenetic chromatin mark that allows heterochromatin formation and gene silencing. It has a fundamental role in preserving genome stability (including chromosome stability) by controlling both gene expression and chromatin structure. Therefore, the onset of an incorrect pattern of DNA methylation is potentially dangerous for the cells. This is particularly important with respect to repetitive elements, which constitute the third of the human genome. MAIN BODY: Repetitive sequences are involved in several cell processes, however, due to their intrinsic nature, they can be a source of genome instability. Thus, most repetitive elements are usually methylated to maintain a heterochromatic, repressed state. Notably, there is increasing evidence showing that repetitive elements (satellites, long interspersed nuclear elements (LINEs), Alus) are frequently hypomethylated in various of human pathologies, from cancer to psychiatric disorders. Repetitive sequences' hypomethylation correlates with chromatin relaxation and unscheduled transcription. If these alterations are directly involved in human diseases aetiology and how, is still under investigation.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Autism spectrum disorder; Cancer; DNA hypomethylation; Hereditary diseases; ICF syndrome; LINE-1; Neuropsychiatric disorders; Repetitive DNA; Satellites
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34082816 PMCID: PMC8173753 DOI: 10.1186/s13072-021-00400-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epigenetics Chromatin ISSN: 1756-8935 Impact factor: 4.954
Fig. 1Characteristics and localization of repetitive DNA. A Distribution of repetitive elements along the chromosome. B Schematics showing the epigenetic characteristics of heterochromatin with methylated cytosines and nucleosomes containing histone H2 di- or tri-methylated on lysine 9 (H3K9me3). Heterochromatic protein 1 (HP1) binds H3K9me3. C Schematic representation of the nucleus showing the organization and localization of heterochromatic REs which are mainly distributed in the nuclear periphery, in the perinucleolar space or as heterochromatic bodies like the case of pericentromeres
Fig. 2Potential contributions of hypomethylated REs to carcinogenesis. As opposed to normal cells, cancer cells are characterized by cytosine methylation loss at repetitive DNA. This alteration can affect cell behaviour and contribute to cancer initiation/progression in several ways. The hypomethylated REs can be regulators of oncogenic lncRNAs and, thus, induce their abnormal transcription. TEs or satellite DNA, once hypomethylated, can be also transcribed potentially affecting several processes and leading to genomic and chromosome stability. Furthermore, hypomethylation of REs could affect chromosome structure making it more fragile and prone to breaks, recombination and even to the weakening of centromere function. By changing the compaction degree of the chromatin, hypomethylation of REs also affects nucleus size and organization which, we believe, could dangerously compromise cells, though this research field has not been well explored
Hypomethylated repetitive elements in human diseases
| Disease | Type of RE | Cell type | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hereditary diseases | AGS | LINEs, LTRs, SINEs and DNA satellites | Fibroblasts | Lim et al. [ |
| ICF | Sat1 and 2 | Fibroblasts, lymphoblasts | Hassan et al. [ | |
| Leukocytes | Jeanpierre et al. [ | |||
| Lymphocytes | Ji et al. [ | |||
| Sat-α | Fibroblasts, leukocytes | Miniou et al. [ | ||
| Blood cells | Velasco et al. [ | |||
| Sub-telomeric repeats | Lymphoblastoid cell lines | Sagie et al. [ | ||
| D4Z4 and NBL2 | Kondo et al. [ | |||
| FSHD | D4Z4 and NBL2 | Several tissues including blood | van Overveld et al. [ | |
| HSAN1E | Sat2, sat-α, LINEs and Alus | Blood cells | Klein et al. [ | |
| SLE | HERV-E | Blood cells | Wu et al. [ | |
| Cancer | Breast cancer | Sat2, sat-α, LINEs and Alus | Tumoural cells | Narayan et al. [ |
| Bladder cancer | Sat2, LINE-1 and Alus, sat-α, NBL2 | Tumoural cells | Si et al. [ | |
| CLL | Alus, LINEs, LTRs, sat | Tumoural cells | Subhash et al. [ | |
| Colon cancer | NBL2 | Tumoural cells | Samuelsson et al. [ | |
| LINE-1 | Blood cells | Samuelsson et al. [ | ||
| Extra-hepatic cholangiocarcinoma | LINE-1, sat2 | Blood cells | Kim et al. [ | |
| Gastrointestinal stromal tumour | AluYb8, sat-α, NBL2 | Tumoural cells | Igarashi et al. [ | |
| LINE-1 | Igarashi et al. [ | |||
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | Alus and LINEs | Tumoural cells | Zheng et al. [ | |
| Sat2 | Wong et al. [ | |||
| NBL2 | Nagai et al. [ | |||
| Neuroblastoma | NBL2 | Tumoural cells | Thoraval et al. [ | |
| Lung carcinoma | Alu | Tumoural cells | Ikeda et al. [ | |
| Ovarian carcinoma | LINE-1 | Tumoural cells | Notaro et al. [ | |
| sat2 and sat-α | Tumoural cells | Qu et al. [ | ||
| Thyroid cancer | Alus | Tumoural cells | Hesselink et al. [ | |
| Wilms tumours | Sat2 and sat-α | Tumoural cells | Qu et al. [ | |
| Ageing | Ageing | Sat3 | Fibroblasts | Enukashvily et al. [ |
| Alus | Blood cells | Bollati et al. [ | ||
| Jintaridth and Mutirangura [ | ||||
| Alus and LINE-1 | DNA-cell free | Erichsen et al. [ | ||
| Brain diseases | Neurodevelopmental disorders | |||
| ASD | LINE-1 s | Lymphocytes | Tangsuwansri et al. [ | |
| Alus | Saeliw et al. [ | |||
| AT | LINE-1, sat2, sat-α | Lymphocytes | Almeida et al. [ | |
| Neurodegenerative disorders | ||||
| AD | Alus, sat-α | Leukocytes | Bollati et al. [ | |
| Neuropsychiatric disorders | ||||
| BP | LINE-1 S2 and S3 | Blood cells | Li et al. [ | |
| AluYA3 | Li et al. [ | |||
| ELS-related disorders | LINE-1 | Leukocytes | Misiak et al. [ | |
| SINEs | Nätt et al. [ | |||
| MDD | LINE-1 | Blood cells | Liu et al. [ | |
| AluJb | Schneider et al. [ | |||
| PTSD | Alus and LINE-1 | Serum | Rusiecki et al. [ | |
| SZ | LINE-1 | Blood cells | Misiak et al. [ | |
| LINE-1 S1 and S3 | Li et al. [ | |||
| AluYA3 | Li et al. [ | |||
AGS Aicardi–Goutières syndrome, AD Alzheimer's disease, ASD autism spectrum disorders, AT ataxia teleangectasia, BP bipolar disorder, CLL chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, ELS early life stress, ICF immunodeficiency with centromeric instability and facial anomalies syndrome, FSHD facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy, MDD major depressive disorder, PTSD post-traumatic stress disorder, SZ schizophrenia