Genomics Inform.  2013 Dec;11(4):164-173. 10.5808/GI.2013.11.4.164.

Interplay between Epigenetics and Genetics in Cancer

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Life Science, College of Natural Sciences, Ajou University, Suwon 443-749, Korea. jsjlee@ajou.ac.kr

Abstract

Genomic instability, which occurs through both genetic mechanisms (underlying inheritable phenotypic variations caused by DNA sequence-dependent alterations, such as mutation, deletion, insertion, inversion, translocation, and chromosomal aneuploidy) and epigenomic aberrations (underlying inheritable phenotypic variations caused by DNA sequence-independent alterations caused by a change of chromatin structure, such as DNA methylation and histone modifications), is known to promote tumorigenesis and tumor progression. Mechanisms involve both genomic instability and epigenomic aberrations that lose or gain the function of genes that impinge on tumor suppression/prevention or oncogenesis. Growing evidence points to an epigenome-wide disruption that involves large-scale DNA hypomethylation but specific hypermethylation of tumor suppressor genes, large blocks of aberrant histone modifications, and abnormal miRNA expression profile. Emerging molecular details regarding the modulation of these epigenetic events in cancer are used to illustrate the alterations of epigenetic molecules, and their consequent malfunctions could contribute to cancer biology. More recently, intriguing evidence supporting that genetic and epigenetic mechanisms are not separate events in cancer has been emerging; they intertwine and take advantage of each other during tumorigenesis. In addition, we discuss the collusion between epigenetics and genetics mediated by heterochromatin protein 1, a major component of heterochromatin, in order to maintain genome integrity.

Keyword

epigenomics; genetics; heterochromatin-specific nonhistone chromosomal protein HP-1; neoplasms

MeSH Terms

Biology
Carcinogenesis
Chromatin
DNA
DNA Methylation
Epigenomics*
Genes, Tumor Suppressor
Genetics*
Genome
Genomic Instability
Heterochromatin
Histones
MicroRNAs
Sequence Deletion
Chromatin
DNA
Heterochromatin
Histones
MicroRNAs
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