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Impact of DNA methylation on health and disease
Chapter by: Esteller, Manel
in: DNA Methylation: Approaches, Methods, and Applications by
[S.l.] : CRC Press, 2004
pp. 1-10
ISBN: 9780849320507
CID: 5320302
Quantitative determination of 5-methylcytosine DNA content: HPCE and HPLC
Chapter by: Fraga, Mario F.; Esteller, Manel
in: DNA Methylation: Approaches, Methods, and Applications by
[S.l.] : CRC Press, 2004
pp. 113-120
ISBN: 9780849320507
CID: 5320312
Qualitative determination of 5-methylcytosine and other components of the DNA methylation machinery: Immunofluorescence and chromatin immunoprecipitation
Chapter by: Espada, Jesus; Ballestar, Esteban; Esteller, Manel
in: DNA Methylation: Approaches, Methods, and Applications by
[S.l.] : CRC Press, 2004
pp. 121-136
ISBN: 9780849320507
CID: 5320292
DNA methylation: Approaches, methods, and applications
Chapter by: Esteller, Manel
in: DNA Methylation: Approaches, Methods, and Applications by
[S.l.] : CRC Press, 2004
pp. 1-224
ISBN: 9780849320507
CID: 5320252
Arbitrarily primed-PCR and related DNA methylation methodologies
Chapter by: Frigola, Jordi; Paz, Maria F.; Esteller, Manel; Peinado, Miguel A.
in: DNA Methylation: Approaches, Methods, and Applications by
[S.l.] : CRC Press, 2004
pp. 85-94
ISBN: 9780849320507
CID: 5320282
Snail mediates E-cadherin repression by the recruitment of the Sin3A/histone deacetylase 1 (HDAC1)/HDAC2 complex
Peinado, Hector; Ballestar, Esteban; Esteller, Manel; Cano, Amparo
The transcription factor Snail has been described as a direct repressor of E-cadherin expression during development and carcinogenesis; however, the specific mechanisms involved in this process remain largely unknown. Here we show that mammalian Snail requires histone deacetylase (HDAC) activity to repress E-cadherin promoter and that treatment with trichostatin A (TSA) is sufficient to block the repressor effect of Snail. Moreover, overexpression of Snail is correlated with deacetylation of histones H3 and H4 at the E-cadherin promoter, and TSA treatment in Snail-expressing cells reverses the acetylation status of histones. Additionally, we demonstrate that Snail interacts in vivo with the E-cadherin promoter and recruits HDAC activity. Most importantly, we demonstrate an interaction between Snail, histone deacetylase 1 (HDAC1) and HDAC2, and the corepressor mSin3A. This interaction is dependent on the SNAG domain of Snail, indicating that the Snail transcription factor mediates the repression by recruitment of chromatin-modifying activities, forming a multimolecular complex to repress E-cadherin expression. Our results establish a direct causal relationship between Snail-dependent repression of E-cadherin and the modification of chromatin at its promoter.
PMCID:303344
PMID: 14673164
ISSN: 0270-7306
CID: 5258372
The histone deacetylase 9 gene is regulated by multiple promoters and expresses lymphoid-specific isoforms [Meeting Abstract]
Petrie, K; Howell, L; Matutes, E; Waxman, S; Piris, MA; Esteller, M; Zelent, A
ISI:000225127501122
ISSN: 0006-4971
CID: 5299042
Methyl-CpG binding proteins identify novel sites of epigenetic inactivation in human cancer
Ballestar, Esteban; Paz, Maria F; Valle, Laura; Wei, Susan; Fraga, Mario F; Espada, Jesus; Cigudosa, Juan Cruz; Huang, Tim Hui-Ming; Esteller, Manel
Methyl-CpG binding proteins (MBDs) mediate histone deacetylase-dependent transcriptional silencing at methylated CpG islands. Using chromatin immunoprecitation (ChIP) we have found that gene-specific profiles of MBDs exist for hypermethylated promoters of breast cancer cells, whilst a common pattern of histone modifications is shared. This unique distribution of MBDs is also characterized in chromosomes by comparative genomic hybridization of immunoprecipitated DNA and immunolocalization. Most importantly, we demonstrate that MBD association to methylated DNA serves to identify novel targets of epigenetic inactivation in human cancer. We combined the ChIP assay of MBDs with a CpG island microarray (ChIP on chip). The scenario revealed shows that, while many genes are regulated by multiple MBDs, others are associated with a single MBD. These target genes displayed methylation- associated transcriptional silencing in breast cancer cells and primary tumours. The candidates include the homeobox gene PAX6, the prolactin hormone receptor, and dipeptidylpeptidase IV among others. Our results support an essential role for MBDs in gene silencing and, when combined with genomic strategies, their potential to 'catch' new hypermethylated genes in cancer.
PMCID:291845
PMID: 14633992
ISSN: 0261-4189
CID: 5258362
GATA-4 and GATA-5 transcription factor genes and potential downstream antitumor target genes are epigenetically silenced in colorectal and gastric cancer
Akiyama, Yoshimitsu; Watkins, Neil; Suzuki, Hiromu; Jair, Kam-Wing; van Engeland, Manon; Esteller, Manel; Sakai, Hidekazu; Ren, Chun-Yan; Yuasa, Yasuhito; Herman, James G; Baylin, Stephen B
The GATA family of transcription factors participates in gastrointestinal (GI) development. Increases in GATA-4 and -5 expression occur in differentiation and GATA-6 expression in proliferation in embryonic and adult settings. We now show that in colorectal cancer (CRC) and gastric cancer promoter hypermethylation and transcriptional silencing are frequent for GATA-4 and -5 but are never seen for GATA-6. Potential antitumor target genes upregulated by GATA-4 and -5, the trefoil factors, inhibinalpha, and disabled-2 (Dab2) are also silenced, in GI cancers, with associated methylation of the promoters. Drug or genetically induced demethylation simultaneously leads to expression, in CRC cells, of all of the GATA-4, -5, and downstream genes. Expression of exogenous GATA-5 overrides methylation at the downstream promoters to activate the target genes. Selection for silencing of both upstream transcription factors and their target genes in GI cancers could indicate that epigenetic silencing of the involved genes provides a summated contribution to tumor progression.
PMCID:262684
PMID: 14612389
ISSN: 0270-7306
CID: 5258352
Profiling aberrant DNA methylation in hematologic neoplasms: a view from the tip of the iceberg
Esteller, Manel
Cancer is also an epigenetic disease. The main epigenetic modification in humans is DNA methylation. Transformed cells undergo a dramatic change in their DNA methylation patterns: certain CpG islands located in the promoter regions of tumor-suppressor genes become hypermethylated and the contiguous gene rests silenced and this phenomenon occurs in an overall genomic environment of DNA hypomethylation. The profile of CpG island hypermethylation in hematologic malignancies is an epigenetic signature unique for each subtype of leukemia or lymphoma. Although the most widely studied genes are the cell-cycle inhibitors p15INK4b and p16INK4a (specially in AML and ALL), the list of methylation-repressed genes in these neoplasms is expanding very rapidly, including MGMT, RARB2, CRBP1, SOCS-1, CDH1, DAPK1, and others. A necessary cross-talk between genetic alterations and DNA methylation exists: certain chromosomal translocations may induce hypermethylation, such as the PML-RARa, or attract methylation, such as BCR-ABL, but DNA hypomethylation can be the culprit behind the genesis of certain abnormal recombination events. From a translational standpoint, hypermethylation can be used as a marker of recurrent disease or progression, for example, in MDS, or response to chemotherapy, such as MGMT methylation in B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Furthermore, promising studies using DNA demethylating agents and histone deacetylase inhibitors are underway to awake these dormant tumor-suppressor genes for a better treatment of the patient with a hematologic malignancy.
PMID: 14585279
ISSN: 1521-6616
CID: 5258342