๐”– Bobbio Scriptorium
โœฆ   LIBER   โœฆ

Diabetic embryopathy: A role for the epigenome?

โœ Scribed by J. Michael Salbaum; Claudia Kappen


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
145 KB
Volume
91
Category
Article
ISSN
1542-0752

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

Embryonic development under adverse conditions, such as maternal diabetes or obesity during pregnancy, constitutes a major risk factor for birth defects, as well as for longโ€term health consequences and disease susceptibility in the offspring. While contributions from epigenetic changes have been invoked previously to explain the longโ€term changes in terms of developmental programming, we here review how maternal metabolism may directly affect the embryonic epigenome in relationship to teratogenic processes. We consider four epigenetic modalities โ€“ DNA methylation, nonโ€coding RNA, transcription factors, and histone modifications โ€“ and their contribution to epigenetic memory, and discuss how epigenomic changes may mediate the altered control of embryonic gene expression brought about by maternal diabetes. In combination, the epigenomic modalities serve to define transcriptionโ€permissive domains of the genome, resulting in distinct epigenomic landscapes in different developmental cell types. We evaluate experimental approaches to characterize the epigenome in adverse pregnancy conditions, highlighting the role of nextโ€generation sequencing on the technological side, while emphasizing the necessity to study defined cell populations in terms of biologic impact. Finally, we outline the challenges in moving from findings that correlate epigenomics to developmental phenotypes to scenarios that establish teratogenic causality. Birth Defects Research (Part A), 2011. ยฉ 2011 Wileyโ€Liss, Inc.


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