Epigenetic Heterogeneity of B-Cell Lymphoma: Chromatin Modifiers.

Abstract:

We systematically studied the expression of more than fifty histone and DNA (de)methylating enzymes in lymphoma and healthy controls. As a main result, we found that the expression levels of nearly all enzymes become markedly disturbed in lymphoma, suggesting deregulation of large parts of the epigenetic machinery. We discuss the effect of DNA promoter methylation and of transcriptional activity in the context of mutated epigenetic modifiers such as EZH2 and MLL2. As another mechanism, we studied the coupling between the energy metabolism and epigenetics via metabolites that act as cofactors of JmjC-type demethylases. Our study results suggest that Burkitt's lymphoma and diffuse large B-cell Lymphoma differ by an imbalance of repressive and poised promoters, which is governed predominantly by the activity of methyltransferases and the underrepresentation of demethylases in this regulation. The data further suggest that coupling of epigenetics with the energy metabolism can also be an important factor in lymphomagenesis in the absence of direct mutations of genes in metabolic pathways. Understanding of epigenetic deregulation in lymphoma and possibly in cancers in general must go beyond simple schemes using only a few modes of regulation.

SEEK ID: https://armlifebank.am/publications/122

PubMed ID: 26506391

DOI: 10.3390/genes6041076

Projects: ML approaches for omic data analysis

Publication type: Journal

Journal: Genes

Publisher: MDPI AG

Citation: Genes,6(4):1076-1112

Date Published: 21st Oct 2015

URL:

Registered Mode: manually

help Submitter
Citation
Hopp, L., Nersisyan, L., Löffler-Wirth, H., Arakelyan, A., & Binder, H. (2015). Epigenetic Heterogeneity of B-Cell Lymphoma: Chromatin Modifiers. In Genes (Vol. 6, Issue 4, pp. 1076–1112). MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/genes6041076
Activity

Views: 86

Created: 24th Oct 2025 at 08:47

help Tags

This item has not yet been tagged.

help Attributions

None

Powered by
(v.1.15.0-main)
Copyright © 2008 - 2024 The University of Manchester and HITS gGmbH