Metaboloepigenetics in cancer, immunity, and cardiovascular disease

Author:

Keating Samuel T1ORCID,El-Osta Assam234567ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen DK-2200 , Denmark

2. Department of Diabetes, Central Clinical School, Monash University , Melbourne, Victoria 3004 , Australia

3. Epigenetics in Human Health and Disease Laboratory, Central Clinical School, Monash University , Melbourne, Victoria 3004 , Australia

4. Department of Medicine and Therapeutics, The Chinese University of Hong Kong , Sha Tin, Hong Kong SAR

5. Hong Kong Institute of Diabetes and Obesity, Prince of Wales Hospital, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, 3/F Lui Che Woo Clinical Sciences Building, 30-32 Ngan Shing Street , Sha Tin, Hong Kong SAR

6. Li Ka Shing Institute of Health Sciences, The Chinese University of Hong Kong , Hong Kong , Sha Tin, SAR

7. Faculty of Health, Department of Technology, Biomedical Laboratory Science, University College Copenhagen , Copenhagen , Denmark

Abstract

Abstract The influence of cellular metabolism on epigenetic pathways is well documented but misunderstood. Scientists have long known of the metabolic impact on epigenetic determinants. More often than not, that title role for DNA methylation was portrayed by the metabolite S-adenosylmethionine. Technically speaking, there are many other metabolites that drive epigenetic processes that instruct seemingly distant—yet highly connect pathways—and none more so than our understanding of the cancer epigenome. Recent studies have shown that available energy links the extracellular environment to influence cellular responses. This focused review examines the recent interest in epigenomics and casts cancer, metabolism, and immunity in unfamiliar roles—cooperating. There are not only language lessons from cancer research, we have come round to appreciate that reaching into areas previously thought of as too distinct are also object lessons in understanding health and disease. The Warburg effect is one such signature of how glycolysis influences metabolic shift during oncogenesis. That shift in metabolism—now recognized as central to proliferation in cancer biology—influences core enzymes that not only control gene expression but are also central to replication, condensation, and the repair of nucleic acid. These nuclear processes rely on metabolism, and with glucose at centre stage, the role of respiration and oxidative metabolism is now synonymous with the mitochondria as the powerhouses of metaboloepigenetics. The emerging evidence for metaboloepigenetics in trained innate immunity has revealed recognizable signalling pathways with antecedent extracellular stimulation. With due consideration to immunometabolism, we discuss the striking signalling similarities influencing these core pathways. The immunometabolic-epigenetic axis in cardiovascular disease has deeply etched connections with inflammation, and we examine the chromatin template as a carrier of epigenetic indices that determine the expression of genes influencing atherosclerosis and vascular complications of diabetes.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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