Regulation of transcription in cancer In vertebrates, the majority of gene
promoters contain a
CpG island with numerous
CpG sites. When many of a gene's promoter CpG sites are
methylated the gene becomes silenced. Colorectal cancers typically have 3 to 6
driver mutations and 33 to 66
hitchhiker or passenger mutations. However, transcriptional silencing may be of more importance than mutation in causing progression to cancer. For example, in colorectal cancers about 600 to 800 genes are transcriptionally silenced by CpG island methylation (see
regulation of transcription in cancer). Transcriptional repression in cancer can also occur by other
epigenetic mechanisms, such as altered expression of
microRNAs. In breast cancer, transcriptional repression of
BRCA1 may occur more frequently by over-expressed microRNA-182 than by hypermethylation of the BRCA1 promoter (see
Low expression of BRCA1 in breast and ovarian cancers).
Regulation of transcription in addiction One of the cardinal features of addiction is its persistence. The persistent behavioral changes appear to be due to long-lasting changes, resulting from
epigenetic alterations affecting gene expression, within particular regions of the brain. Drugs of abuse cause three types of epigenetic alteration in the brain. These are (1)
histone acetylations and
histone methylations, (2) DNA methylation at
CpG sites, and (3) epigenetic
downregulation or upregulation of
microRNAs. (See
Epigenetics of cocaine addiction for some details.) Chronic nicotine intake in mice alters brain cell epigenetic control of gene expression through
acetylation of histones. This increases expression in the brain of the protein FosB, important in addiction. Cigarette addiction was also studied in about 16,000 humans, including never smokers, current smokers, and those who had quit smoking for up to 30 years. In blood cells, more than 18,000
CpG sites (of the roughly 450,000 analyzed CpG sites in the genome) had frequently altered methylation among current smokers. These CpG sites occurred in over 7,000 genes, or roughly a third of known human genes. The majority of the differentially methylated
CpG sites returned to the level of never-smokers within five years of smoking cessation. However, 2,568 CpGs among 942 genes remained differentially methylated in former versus never smokers. Such remaining epigenetic changes can be viewed as "molecular scars" methamphetamine, alcohol and tobacco smoke products, all cause DNA damage in the brain. During repair of DNA damages some individual repair events can alter the methylation of DNA and/or the acetylations or methylations of histones at the sites of damage, and thus can contribute to leaving an epigenetic scar on chromatin. Such epigenetic scars likely contribute to the persistent epigenetic changes found in addiction.
Regulation of transcription in learning and memory group to the DNA that happens at
cytosine. The image shows a cytosine single ring base and a methyl group added on to the 5 carbon. In mammals, DNA methylation occurs almost exclusively at a cytosine that is followed by a
guanine. In mammals, methylation of cytosine (see Figure) in DNA is a major regulatory mediator. Methylated cytosines primarily occur in dinucleotide sequences where cytosine is followed by a guanine, a
CpG site. The total number of
CpG sites in the human genome is approximately 28 million. and generally about 70% of all CpG sites have a methylated cytosine. In a rat, a painful learning experience, contextual
fear conditioning, can result in a life-long fearful memory after a single training event. Cytosine methylation is altered in the promoter regions of about 9.17% of all genes in the hippocampus neuron DNA of a rat that has been subjected to a brief
fear conditioning experience. The
hippocampus is where new memories are initially stored. Methylation of CpGs in a promoter region of a gene represses transcription while methylation of CpGs in the body of a gene increases expression.
TET enzymes play a central role in demethylation of methylated cytosines. Demethylation of CpGs in a gene promoter by
TET enzyme activity increases transcription of the gene. When contextual
fear conditioning is applied to a rat, more than 5,000
differentially methylated regions (DMRs) (of 500 nucleotides each) occur in the rat
hippocampus neural genome both one hour and 24 hours after the conditioning in the hippocampus. This causes about 500 genes to be up-regulated (often due to demethylation of CpG sites in a promoter region) and about 1,000 genes to be down-regulated (often due to newly formed 5-methylcytosine at CpG sites in a promoter region). The pattern of induced and repressed genes within neurons appears to provide a molecular basis for forming the first transient memory of this training event in the hippocampus of the rat brain. == Post-transcriptional regulation ==