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Review
. 2012 Jan 17;106(2):248-53.
doi: 10.1038/bjc.2011.550. Epub 2011 Dec 13.

Intragenic DNA methylation: implications of this epigenetic mechanism for cancer research

Affiliations
Review

Intragenic DNA methylation: implications of this epigenetic mechanism for cancer research

N Shenker et al. Br J Cancer. .

Abstract

Epigenetics is the study of all mechanisms that regulate gene transcription and genome stability that are maintained throughout the cell division, but do not include the DNA sequence itself. The best-studied epigenetic mechanism to date is DNA methylation, where methyl groups are added to the cytosine base within cytosine-guanine dinucleotides (CpG sites). CpGs are frequently clustered in high density (CpG islands (CGIs)) at the promoter of over half of all genes. Current knowledge of transcriptional regulation by DNA methylation centres on its role at the promoter where unmethylated CGIs are present at most actively transcribed genes, whereas hypermethylation of the promoter results in gene repression. Over the last 5 years, research has gradually incorporated a broader understanding that methylation patterns across the gene (so-called intragenic or gene body methylation) may have a role in transcriptional regulation and efficiency. Numerous genome-wide DNA methylation profiling studies now support this notion, although whether DNA methylation patterns are a cause or consequence of other regulatory mechanisms is not yet clear. This review will examine the evidence for the function of intragenic methylation in gene transcription, and discuss the significance of this in carcinogenesis and for the future use of therapies targeted against DNA methylation.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
A schematic of the correlation determined by Zilberman et al for the methylation levels of differentially expressed genes. Abbreviations: TSS, transcription start site; 3′ UTR, three-prime untranslated region.
Figure 2
Figure 2
(A) Methylation levels of each CpG site (grey circles) along the full length of the ESR1 gene from the transcription start site (indicated by ‘0’ on the x axis). The exons are shown along the uppermost horizontal line as full black circles. The black line indicates the smoothed average methylation levels across the gene. The data were obtained from the bisulphite sequencing study of peripheral mononuclear cells by Li et al (2010). (B) Genome-wide studies of human embryonic stem cells (ESCs, solid) and lung-derived fibroblasts (dotted) showed different patterns of IGM in the ESR1 gene, and a broadly unmethylated promoter region. In ESCs that had differentiated into fibroblasts (dashed), the pattern of IGM bore a greater similarity to the adult differentiated pattern (IMR90 cell line, adult fibroblasts) than wild-type ESCs. The exons are shown along the uppermost horizontal line as full black circles, with x axis showing the log scale genomic location.

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