Cancer biology: Edited by Pierre Hainaut and Amelie Plymoth

DNA methylation and cancer: ghosts and angels above the genes

Sinčić, Ninoa; Herceg, Zdenkob

Author Information
Current Opinion in Oncology 23(1):p 69-76, January 2011. | DOI: 10.1097/CCO.0b013e3283412eb4

Abstract

Purpose of review 

To discuss recent advances in the field of DNA methylation and their impact on our understanding of the role of this epigenetic mechanism in cancer development, as well as their implications for biomarker discovery and therapy.

Recent findings 

Epigenetics is a new frontier in cancer research with tremendous impact on our thinking and understanding of biological phenomena and complex diseases, notably cancer. Over the past decade there has been remarkable progress in our knowledge of the importance of epigenetic events in the control of both normal cellular processes and abnormal events associated with tumor development and progression. DNA methylation is a major epigenetic mechanism that is most intensively studied in the context of gene regulation and unscheduled silencing in cancer cells. Although hypermethylation of gene promoters is in turn associated with gene inactivation, the precise consequences of genome-wide hypomethylation are still debated. Recent studies have shed new light on the mechanisms underlying both promoter-specific hypermethylation and global hypomethylation in cancer cells and identified potential targets for biomarker discovery and therapeutic intervention.

Summary 

Recent conceptual advances in the field of DNA methylation and the advent and rapid development of new technologies in epigenomics have started to unravel the mechanisms underlying aberrant DNA methylation in cancer cells and identify novel targets for diagnosis, risk assessment and therapy.

© 2011 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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