Epigenetic dysregulation in autophagy signaling as a driver of viral manifested oral carcinogenesis
- PMID: 35940381
- DOI: 10.1016/j.bbadis.2022.166517
Epigenetic dysregulation in autophagy signaling as a driver of viral manifested oral carcinogenesis
Abstract
Background: Concurrent viral infections insist on dysregulated epigenetics of tumor suppressor genes (TSGs), cell cycle regulators, apoptosis, and autophagy-associated genes to manifest oral carcinogenesis. Autophagy has been projected as a strategic defense signaling cascade against viral entry and subsequent oral carcinogenesis. Compromised autophagy signaling during viral infection fuels oral cancer initiation and progression.
Scope of review: The aberrant expression of autophagy genes and their encoded proteins is catalyzed by the dysregulated epigenome, legitimate epigenomic mutations, and post-transcriptional modifications such as hypermethylation, deacetylation of histone and non-histone targets, and hyperacetylation of histones that drive malignant transformation during oral carcinogenesis. Recent investigations have predicted epi-drugs (intriguingly methylation and deacetylation inhibitors and activators) as next-generation oral cancer therapeutic agents with a special notation for autophagy regulation.
Major conclusions: This review focuses on the epigenetic mediated post-transcriptional modulation of autophagy genes during viral manifested oral carcinogenesis with a distinctive perception of autophagy-modulating epi-drugs in oral cancer therapeutics.
Keywords: Autophagy; Epi-drugs; Epigenetics; Oral cancer; Viral infection.
Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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