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Chromosome structural variation in tumorigenesis: mechanisms of formation and carcinogenesis

Wenjun Wang, Lingyu Li, Jiuwei Cui

2020Epigenetics & Chromatin44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

With the rapid development of next-generation sequencing technology, chromosome structural variation has gradually gained increased clinical significance in tumorigenesis. However, the molecular mechanism(s) underlying this structural variation remain poorly understood. A search of the literature shows that a three-dimensional chromatin state plays a vital role in inducing structural variation and in the gene expression profiles in tumorigenesis. Structural variants may result in changes in copy number or deletions of coding sequences, as well as the perturbation of structural chromatin features, especially topological domains, and disruption of interactions between genes and their regulatory elements. This review focuses recent work aiming at elucidating how structural variations develop and misregulate oncogenes and tumor suppressors, to provide general insights into tumor formation mechanisms and to provide potential targets for future anticancer therapies.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyStructural variationCarcinogenesisChromatinComputational biologyGeneGeneticsMechanism (biology)Human geneticsChromosomeGenomeEpistemologyPhilosophyGenomics and Chromatin DynamicsCancer Genomics and DiagnosticsEpigenetics and DNA Methylation
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