4.3 Review

Losing DNA methylation at repetitive elements and breaking bad

Journal

EPIGENETICS & CHROMATIN
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13072-021-00400-z

Keywords

DNA hypomethylation; Repetitive DNA; Satellites; LINE-1; Cancer; ICF syndrome; Autism spectrum disorder; Alzheimer's disease; Neuropsychiatric disorders; Hereditary diseases

Funding

  1. Fondo Sociale Europeo [AIM 1808223-1]

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Hypomethylation of repetitive sequences is common in various human diseases, indicating that the methylation status of these elements may play a role in maintaining human health. This suggests potential therapeutic strategies focused on modulating DNA methylation of repetitive sequences.
Background DNA methylation is an epigenetic chromatin mark that allows heterochromatin formation and gene silencing. It has a fundamental role in preserving genome stability (including chromosome stability) by controlling both gene expression and chromatin structure. Therefore, the onset of an incorrect pattern of DNA methylation is potentially dangerous for the cells. This is particularly important with respect to repetitive elements, which constitute the third of the human genome. Main body Repetitive sequences are involved in several cell processes, however, due to their intrinsic nature, they can be a source of genome instability. Thus, most repetitive elements are usually methylated to maintain a heterochromatic, repressed state. Notably, there is increasing evidence showing that repetitive elements (satellites, long interspersed nuclear elements (LINEs), Alus) are frequently hypomethylated in various of human pathologies, from cancer to psychiatric disorders. Repetitive sequences' hypomethylation correlates with chromatin relaxation and unscheduled transcription. If these alterations are directly involved in human diseases aetiology and how, is still under investigation. Conclusions Hypomethylation of different families of repetitive sequences is recurrent in many different human diseases, suggesting that the methylation status of these elements can be involved in preservation of human health. This provides a promising point of view towards the research of therapeutic strategies focused on specifically tuning DNA methylation of DNA repeats.

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