950 resultados para DNA-METHYLATION
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Pós-graduação em Medicina Veterinária - FMVZ
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Breast cancer has received an increasing attention because it is one of the most common cancer type and a leading cause of morbity and mortality among women worldwide. This disease has been considered as a heterogeneous condition, demonstrating a large spectrum of clinical and histopathological variability. In the last two decades, several studies have been conducted to identify new molecular markers of cancer cells, including the alterations of DNA methylation, which is the major epigenetic mechanism associated with the control of gene expression. The hypermethylation of promoter-associated CpG islands contributes to the loss of function of several cancer-related genes, including those encoding to the estrogen receptor (ESR) and progesterone receptor (PGR). This study aimed to determine the methylation patterns of CpG islands of the genes encoding the estrogen receptor α (ESR1 gene, promoters A and B), estrogen receptor β (ESR2 gene) and progesterone receptor (PGR gene, promoter A and B) in 15 cell lines derived from breast cancer. The DNA methylation analysis was based on the “Methylation Specific-Polymerase Chain Reaction” (MSP), which provides a qualitative assessment of the methylation status of a specific CpG island. The results revealed heterogeneous data: the promoter region of ESR1A showed complete methylation in one cell line (BT549) and only two cell lines showed partial methylation (MDA-MB-231 and MDA-MB-453), while the others lineages presented unmethylated alleles. The promoter region of isoform ESR1B was unmethylated in the cell lines BT549, SKBR3 and T47D; partial methylation were observed in the cell lines MDA-MB- 231, MCF-7 and ZR-75-30, while the others cell lines presented complete methylation. All lineages showed complete or partial methylation of the ESR2 gene. The methylation pattern of the promoter A of the PGR ...(Complete abstract click electronic access below)
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It is believed that epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation are important for the tumorigenesis and maintenance of the altered state of tumor cells. DNA methylation occurs by the addition of a methyl group to carbon 5 of cytosine, catalyzed by the enzyme DNA methyl-transferase, which can change the expression of a gene, including the tumor suppressor genes. In human squamous cell carcinoma, several features have shown the etiological role of genes in tumor development. Among them, FOXE1 gene (forkhead box E1 - thyroid transcription factor) is presented with an important role in susceptibility to disease. Similarly the FOXE1 methylation pattern could alter the expression of this gene in dogs and predisposed to tumor on. Therefore, this study aims to investigate in dogs, the validity of the strategy employed in humans to analyze the FOXE1 methylation status. DNA extraction from fresh frozen tumoral samples was performed by Wizard Genomic® DNA Purification Kit. The methylation status was determined by MSP-PCR (methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction), using 2.0 ng of DNA treated with sodium bisulphate. One hundred micrograms of bisulphite-modified DNA was amplified using primers specific for either methylated or unmethylated DNA (primers sequences are available at http://pathology2.jhu.edu/pancreas/primer.pdf). The analysis of fragments was loaded on to 7% polyacrylamide gels and silver nitrate staining. In this stage of technical approach, 60% were FOXE1 hypermethylated. In conclusion, it was observed that the standard technique for assessing the methylation pattern of gene FOXE1 in humans can be used for the same evaluation in dogs. The correlation of these molecular data with clinical and histopathological parameters may have diagnostic and prognostic value and still be used as a tumor marker for therapeutic decision and surgical approach
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Pós-graduação em Ciências Biológicas (Genética) - IBB
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Transmissibility of dental and jaw characteristics is strongly influenced by environmental factors during the years of extra uterine life when odontogenesis occurs. Through biochemical factors, such as enzymes, proteins, hormones and other mediators, genes are activated or silenced to suit the cell or organism to its environment. These changes are not transmitted to our descendants, because of that, these factors are called epigenetic. Among the most cited epigenetic factors are food, pollution, drugs and exercise. The objective of this study was to assess the transmissibility of dental characteristics in two pairs of twins. In one case, 13-year-old boys had the same basic dental and jaw characteristics with prolonged retention of the second upper deciduous molars and the presence of permanent successors. In the other case, 14-year-old boys had prolonged retention of lower deciduous second molars and absence of permanent successors, but only one of them had the germs of third lower molars. The phenotypic difference in the dentition of twins from clinical case 2 could be due to epigenetic factors, showing the absence of genetic determinism in the transmissibility of dental characteristics.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Background: Sugarcane is an important crop worldwide for sugar production and increasingly, as a renewable energy source. Modern cultivars have polyploid, large complex genomes, with highly unequal contributions from ancestral genomes. Long Terminal Repeat retrotransposons (LTR-RTs) are the single largest components of most plant genomes and can substantially impact the genome in many ways. It is therefore crucial to understand their contribution to the genome and transcriptome, however a detailed study of LTR-RTs in sugarcane has not been previously carried out. Results: Sixty complete LTR-RT elements were classified into 35 families within four Copia and three Gypsy lineages. Structurally, within lineages elements were similar, between lineages there were large size differences. FISH analysis resulted in the expected pattern of Gypsy/heterochromatin, Copia/euchromatin, but in two lineages there was localized clustering on some chromosomes. Analysis of related ESTs and RT-PCR showed transcriptional variation between tissues and families. Four distinct patterns were observed in sRNA mapping, the most unusual of which was that of Ale1, with very large numbers of 24nt sRNAs in the coding region. The results presented support the conclusion that distinct small RNA-regulated pathways in sugarcane target the lineages of LTR-RT elements. Conclusions: Individual LTR-RT sugarcane families have distinct structures, and transcriptional and regulatory signatures. Our results indicate that in sugarcane individual LTR-RT families have distinct behaviors and can potentially impact the genome in diverse ways. For instance, these transposable elements may affect nearby genes by generating a diverse set of small RNA's that trigger gene silencing mechanisms. There is also some evidence that ancestral genomes contribute significantly different element numbers from particular LTR-RT lineages to the modern sugarcane cultivar genome.
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Although somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) is a promising tool, its potential use is hampered by the high mortality rates during the development to term of cloned offspring. Abnormal epigenetic reprogramming of donor nuclei after SCNT is thought to be the main cause of this low efficiency. We hypothesized that chromatin-modifying agents (CMAs) targeting chromatin acetylation and DNA methylation could alter the chromatin configuration and turn them more amenable to reprogramming. Thus, bovine fibroblasts were treated with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine (AZA) plus trichostatin (TSA) or hydralazine (HH) plus valproic acid (VPA) whereas, in another trial, cloned bovine zygotes were treated with TSA. The treatment of fibroblasts with either AZA + TSA or HH + VPA increased histone acetylation, but did not affect the level of DNA methylation. However, treatment with HH + VPA decreased cellular viability and proliferation. The use of these cells as nuclear donors showed no positive effect on pre- and postimplantation development. Regarding the treatment of cloned zygotes with TSA, treated one-cell embryos showed an increase in the acetylation patterns, but not in the level of DNA methylation. Moreover, this treatment revealed no positive effect on pre- and postimplantation development. This work provides evidence the treatment of either nuclear donor cells or cloned zygotes with CMAs has no positive effect on pre- and postimplantation development of cloned cattle.
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The DOK1 gene is a putative tumour suppressor gene located on the human chromosome 2p13 which is frequently rearranged in leukaemia and other human tumours. We previously reported that the DOK1 gene can be mutated and its expression down-regulated in human malignancies. However, the mechanism underlying DOK1 silencing remains largely unknown. We show here that unscheduled silencing of DOK1 expression through aberrant hypermethylation is a frequent event in a variety of human malignancies. DOK1 was found to be silenced in nine head and neck cancer (HNC) cell lines studied and DOK1 CpG hypermethylation correlated with loss of gene expression in these cells. DOK1 expression could be restored via demethylating treatment using 5-aza-2'deoxycytidine. In addition, transduction of cancer cell lines with DOK1 impaired their proliferation, consistent with the critical role of epigenetic silencing of DOK1 in the development and maintenance of malignant cells. We further observed that DOK1 hypermethylation occurs frequently in a variety of primary human neoplasm including solid tumours (93% in HNC, 81% in lung cancer) and haematopoietic malignancy (64% in Burkitt's lymphoma). Control blood samples and exfoliated mouth epithelial cells from healthy individuals showed a low level of DOK1 methylation, suggesting that DOK1 hypermethylation is a tumour specific event. Finally, an inverse correlation was observed between the level of DOK1 gene methylation and its expression in tumour and adjacent non tumour tissues. Thus, hypermethylation of DOK1 is a potentially critical event in human carcinogenesis, and may be a potential cancer biomarker and an attractive target for epigenetic-based therapy.
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Bananas (Musa spp.) are highly perishable fruit of notable economic and nutritional relevance. Because the identification of proteins involved in metabolic pathways could help to extend green-life and improve the quality of the fruit, this study aimed to compare the proteins of banana pulp at the pre-climacteric and climacteric stages. The use of two-dimensional fluorescence difference gel electrophoresis (2D-DIGE) revealed 50 differentially expressed proteins, and comparing those proteins to the Mass Spectrometry Protein Sequence Database (MSDB) identified 26 known proteins. Chitinases were the most abundant types of proteins in unripe bananas, and two isoforms in the ripe fruit have been implicated in the stress/defense response. In this regard, three heat shock proteins and isoflavone reductase were also abundant at the climacteric stage. Concerning fruit quality, pectate lyase, malate dehydrogenase, and starch phosphorylase accumulated during ripening. In addition to the ethylene formation enzyme amino cyclo carboxylic acid oxidase, the accumulation of S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine hydrolase was needed because of the increased ethylene synthesis and DNA methylation that occurred in ripening bananas. Differential analysis provided information on the ripening-associated changes that occurred in proteins involved in banana flavor, texture, defense, synthesis of ethylene, regulation of expression, and protein folding, and this analysis validated previous data on the transcripts during ripening. In this regard, the differential proteomics of fruit pulp enlarged our understanding of the process of banana ripening. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Genome-wide association studies have failed to establish common variant risk for the majority of common human diseases. The underlying reasons for this failure are explained by recent studies of resequencing and comparison of over 1200 human genomes and 10 000 exomes, together with the delineation of DNA methylation patterns (epigenome) and full characterization of coding and noncoding RNAs (transcriptome) being transcribed. These studies have provided the most comprehensive catalogues of functional elements and genetic variants that are now available for global integrative analysis and experimental validation in prospective cohort studies. With these datasets, researchers will have unparalleled opportunities for the alignment, mining, and testing of hypotheses for the roles of specific genetic variants, including copy number variations, single nucleotide polymorphisms, and indels as the cause of specific phenotypes and diseases. Through the use of next-generation sequencing technologies for genotyping and standardized ontological annotation to systematically analyze the effects of genomic variation on humans and model organism phenotypes, we will be able to find candidate genes and new clues for disease’s etiology and treatment. This article describes essential concepts in genetics and genomic technologies as well as the emerging computational framework to comprehensively search websites and platforms available for the analysis and interpretation of genomic data.
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Caveolae sind vesikuläre Invaginationen der eukaryontischen Zellmembran, die bei einer Vielzahl zellbiologischer Prozesse eine bedeutende Rolle spielen. Die strukturellen und funktionellen Hauptbestandteile der Caveolae sind die Caveolin-Proteine, welche von drei homologen Genen (Caveolin-1,-2,-3) kodiert werden. Die Caveoline stellen die Struktur-Organisatoren der Caveolae dar, und regulieren direkt die Aktivität von zahlreichen Caveolae-assoziierten Rezeptorproteinen und Signalmolekülen. Oftmals werden die pleiotropen Effekte der Caveoline über eine Veränderung der Caveolin-Genexpressionsstärke moduliert. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden drei unterschiedliche biologische Steuerfaktoren identifiziert, unter deren Kontrolle die Caveolin-Genexpression in neuralen Zellsystemen steht. Bei diesen Faktoren handelt es sich um das Steroidhormon Oestrogen und seine Rezeptoren, den Wachstumsfaktor TGFa und den sekundären Botenstoff zyklisches AMP (cAMP). Oestrogen wirkt über die Aktivierung von Oestrogen-Rezeptoren (ERs) im zentralen Nervensystem in der Regel als neurotropher Faktor. In der vorliegenden Arbeit konnte erstmalig gezeigt werden, daß in humanen Neuroblastom-Zellen (SK-N-MC) die stabile, rekombinante Expression des ERa-Subtyps zu einer drastischen Reduktion der Caveolin-1/-2-Transkription führt, und daß in der Folge die zelluläre Caveolin-Biosynthese eingestellt wird. Eine Analyse des Caveolin-1-Gens ergab, daß einhergehend mit der Inaktivierung der Caveolin-1-Transkription eine Vielzahl der im Promoter enthaltenen CpG-Dinukleotide methyliert vorliegen. Durch pharmakologische Inhibition der nukleären DNA-Methyltransferasen sowie der Histon-Deacetylasen konnte die Caveolin-1-Transkription teilweise wiederhergestellt werden. Diese Befunde lassen auf die Existenz eines DNA-Methylierungs-abhängigen Stilllegungsmechanismus der Caveolin-Genexpression durch ERa schließen. Dagegen führte die Überexpression des ERb-Subtyps in SK-N-MC-Zellen zu keiner Veränderung der Caveolin-1/-2-Expression. Interessanterweise wurde die supprimierende Wirkung des ERa durch die gleichzeitige Überexpression des ERb vollständig aufgehoben. Der mitogene Wachstumsfaktor TGFa wurde als zweites extrazelluläres Signalmolekül identifiziert, welches eine Reduktion der Caveolin-1/-2-Genexpression bewirkt. In primären kortikalen Astrozyten konnte gezeigt werden, daß TGFa seine supprimierende Wirkung auf die Caveolin-1-Expression partiell über die Aktivierung des PI3-Kinase-abhängigen Signalweges vermittelt. Zudem wurde die supprimierende Wirkung von TGFa durch einen Inhibitior der Histon-Deacetylasen relativiert. Daher scheinen sowohl für den ERa als auch für TGFa epigenetische Prozesse bei der Suppression der Caveolin-1-Genexpression eine entscheidende Rolle zu spielen. Intrazellulär wirkte neben der PI3-Kinase auch der Botenstoff cAMP in kortikalen Astrozyten als Suppressor der Caveolin-Genexpression. Es wäre denkbar, daß die Caveolin-Suppression funktioneller Bestandteil des seit langem etablierten Effekts der cAMP-induzierten Astrozyten-Differenzierung ist. Desweiteren wiesen der cAMP- und TGFa-abhängige Signalweg ein überlappendes, Gehirnregion-spezifisches Regulationsprofil der Caveolin-Expression in Astrozyten auf: während in Kortex und Striatum eine Regulation durch cAMP und TGFa erfolgte, blieb diese in Klein- und Zwischenhirn aus. Somit bewirken drei zentrale regulatorische Faktoren der Proliferation und Differenzierung neuraler Zellen eine Reduktion in der Konzentration der pleiotrop funktionellen Caveoline. Zukünftige Studien müssen zeigen, inwieweit die reduzierte Caveolin-Expression für die morphologischen und biochemischen Primärwirkungen dieser Faktoren während der Entwicklung und im Zuge der Tumorgenese mitverantwortlich ist. Außerdem könnten über die Beobachtungen der zellbiologischen Auswirkungen reduzierter Caveolin-Spiegel neue Erkenntnisse über die Funktion dieser Proteine gewonnen werden.