May 30, 2012 in Genetics
A study led by Manel Esteller, director of the Epigenetics and Cancer
Biology Program at the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL),
professor of genetics at the University
of Barcelona and ICREA researcher, has
completed the first epigenome in Europe . The
finding is published in the latest issue of the international scientific
journal Epigenetics. DNA Methylation
Products - MethylEasy™ DNA Bisulfite Kit reduces DNA loss by over 90%. -
www.geneticsignatures.com The genome of
all cells in the human body is the same for all of them, regardless their
aspect and functions. Therefore, genome cannot fully explain the activity of
tissues and organs and their disorders in complex diseases like cancer. It
takes a further explanation. Part of this explanation is provided by
epigenetics, a field of biology that studies the heredity activity of DNA that
does not involve changes in its sequence. That is, if genetics is the alphabet,
epigenetics is the spelling that guides the activity of our cells.
Methylation Epigenetics refers to chemical changes in our
genetic material and proteins that regulate it. The best-known epigenetic mark
is the methylation, the addition of a methyl chemical group (-CH3) in our DNA.
The epigenome consists of all the epigenetic marks of a living being. The
authors of the study have completed the epigenomes for all brands of methylation
of DNA from white blood cells of two girls: a healthy one and a patient
suffering from a rare genetic disease called Immunodeficiency, Centromere
instability and Facial anomalies syndrome (ICF). This disease is caused by a
mutation in a gene that causes the addition of a methyl chemical group in its
DNA. The analysis performed by the researchers
reveals that the patient has an epigenomic defect that causes fragility of
chromosomes, which thus can easily be broken. In addition, the study shows that
the patient has a wrong epigenetic control of many genes related to the
response against infection, which causes a severe immune deficiency. The
study coordinator, Manel Esteller, emphasizes that due to this study, "we
now know what happens in this type of rare diseases and we can start thinking
about strategies for new treatments based on this knowledge." Dr.
Esteller is an international leader in the field of epigenetics. His work has
been crucial to show that all human tumours have in common a specific chemical
alteration: the hypermethylation of tumour suppressor genes. Since 2008 is the
director of the Epigenetics and Cancer Biology Program at IDIBELL.
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