| Literature DB >> 35834015 |
Leonidas Benetatos1, Agapi Benetatou2, Georgios Vartholomatos3.
Abstract
DNA methylation has a well-established role in the pathogenesis, prognosis, and response to treatment in all the spectra of hematological malignancies. However, most of the data reported involve average DNA methylation observed in a sample. The emergence of bisulfite sequencing methods such as enhanced reduced representation that permit analyze adjacent CpGs led to exciting findings. Among these are the epialleles shift and the resulting epigenetic heterogeneity observed in leukemias and lymphomas. Epialleles seem to have an influential role as the cause of mutations that characterize leukemias, may stratify groups with different prognosis and response to treatment, and may be redistributed in the genome at different time points of the disease promoting activation of alternate transcriptional networks. Epiallelic shift may be responsible for the intratumor heterogeneity observed within the cells of the same tumor which increases with disease aggressiveness. It may also responsible for the interpatient heterogeneity explaining why blood cancers exhibit different behavior among different patients. Understanding better epiallelic conformation and the consequent chromatin conformational changes and the pathways that may be affected will permit deeper understanding of hematological malignancies pathogenesis and treatment.Entities:
Keywords: AML; CLL; DNA methylation; Epiallele; Epigenetic heterogeneity; Lymphoma; Multiple myeloma
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35834015 DOI: 10.1007/s12032-022-01737-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Oncol ISSN: 1357-0560 Impact factor: 3.738