Epigenetics Flashcards
What are the four main characteristics of epigenetic phenomena?
- Different gene expression with an identical genome
- Inheritance through cell division, even through generations
- Consistent ON/OFF switch
- Erasable & reset-able
What is the basic principle of Waddington’s epigenetic landscape?
That cell fates are established in development much like a marble rolls down to the point of lowest local elevation
Different cell states = different paths the cell can take
What are three specific examples of epigenetic phenomena?
- Chromatin-mediated gene silencing
- Centromere marking by the histone variant CENP-A (attachment to spindle during mitosis)
- Reinforcing feedback loops involving trans-acting factors that have a specific initiation event and are ‘inherited’ in the cytosol during cell division
How can DNA methylation be inherited through cell division?
Maintenance methyltransferases propagate epigenetic marks through somatic cell division
What are three chemical modifications (to DNA or histones) that can potentially be inherited?
- Methylation (methyltransferases)
- Acetylation (i.e. histone deacetylase)
- Chromatin structure
What is a problem for maintaining an epigenetic state?
That DNA replication is semi-conservative so half of the DNA and histones are old and the other half are new
What is the specific type of gene that, when aberrant methylated with 5’-MeC, can lead to cancer?
What sort of therapeutic intervention is possible?
TSG (Tumor suppressor genes)
Therapeutic inhibition of DNA methyltransferase and histone deacetylase (to prevent TSG silencing)