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Epigenetics and Helicobacter pylori

Rosanna Capparelli, Domenico Iannelli

2022International Journal of Molecular Sciences29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Epigenetics regulates gene expression, cell type development during differentiation, and the cell response to environmental stimuli. To survive, bacteria need to evade the host immune response. Bacteria, including Helicobacter pylori (Hp), reach this target epigenetically, altering the chromatin of the host cells, in addition to several more approaches, such as DNA mutation and recombination. This review shows that Hp prevalently silences the genes of the human gastric mucosa by DNA methylation. Epigenetics includes different mechanisms. However, DNA methylation persists after DNA replication and therefore is frequently associated with the inheritance of repressed genes. Chromatin modification can be transmitted to daughter cells leading to heritable changes in gene expression. Aberrant epigenetic alteration of the gastric mucosa DNA remains the principal cause of gastric cancer. Numerous methylated genes have been found in cancer as well as in precancerous lesions of Hp-infected patients. These methylated genes inactivate tumor-suppressor genes. It is time for us to complain about our genetic and epigenetic makeups for our diseases.

Topics & Concepts

EpigeneticsBiologyDNA methylationGeneGeneticsChromatinHelicobacter pyloriCancer epigeneticsDNAGene expressionHelicobacter pylori-related gastroenterology studiesCancer-related gene regulationRNA modifications and cancer
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