Open access · OA
via OpenAlex
The ‘golden age’ of DNA methylation in neurodegenerative diseases
Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (CCLM) · 2012 · ▲ 51 citations
Abstract
DNA methylation reactions are regulated, in the first instance, by enzymes and the intermediates that constitute the 'so called' one-carbon metabolism. This is a complex biochemical pathway, also known as the homocysteine cycle, regulated by the presence of B vitamins (folate, B6, B12) and choline, among other metabolites. One of the intermediates of this metabolism is S-adenosylmethionine, which represent the methyl donor in all the DNA methyltransferase reactions in eukaryotes. The one-carbon metabolism therefore produces the substrate necessary for the transferring of a methyl group on the cytosine residues of DNA; S-adenosylmethionine also regulates the activity of the enzymes that catalyze this reaction, namely the DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs). Alterations of this metabolic cycle can therefore be responsible for aberrant DNA methylation processes possibly leading to several human diseases. As a matter of fact, increasing evidences indicate that a number of human diseases with multifactorial origin may have an epigenetic basis. This is also due to the great technical advances in the field of epigenetic research. Among the human diseases associated with epigenetic factors, aging-related and neurodegenerative diseases are probably the object of most intense research. This review will present the main evidences linking several human diseases to DNA methylation, with particular focus on neurodegenerative diseases, together with a short description of the state-of-the-art of methylation assays.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1515/cclm-2012-0618
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-03 MST
Cite this
APA
Fuso, A. (2012). The ‘golden age’ of DNA methylation in neurodegenerative diseases. <em>Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (CCLM)</em>. https://doi.org/10.1515/cclm-2012-0618
Vancouver
Fuso A. The ‘golden age’ of DNA methylation in neurodegenerative diseases. Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (CCLM). 2012. doi:10.1515/cclm-2012-0618.
BibTeX
@article{andrea2012Thegol,
title = {The ‘golden age’ of DNA methylation in neurodegenerative diseases},
author = {Andrea Fuso},
journal = {Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (CCLM)},
year = {2012},
doi = {10.1515/cclm-2012-0618},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Epigenetics 2017
Preprint · OA
Human liver epigenetic alterations in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis are related to insulin action
Cells 2018
Open access · CC-BY
The Nutrient-Sensing Hexosamine Biosynthetic Pathway as the Hub of Cancer Metabolic Rewiring
Journal of Neurochemistry 2016
Open access · OA
<scp>DNA</scp> methylation in Parkinson's disease
Cell Death Discovery 2020
Open access · CC-BY
The Janus-like role of proline metabolism in cancer
Current Genomics 2015
Preprint · CC-BY
Epigenetics of Aging
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2009
Preprint · OA