Risultati per: L’alcool danneggia il DNA e aumenta il rischio di cancro.
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Mo2052 PILOT STUDY OF INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE PATIENTS SUGGESTS POTENTIAL CORRELATION BETWEEN CONCENTRATIONS OF FECAL MITOCHONDRIAL DNA AND SEVERITY OF INFLAMMATORY ACTIVITY
Mo1909 DEFECTIVE MUCUS IN CYSTIC FIBROSIS INCREASES VULNERABILITY TO COLIBACTIN-MEDIATED DNA ADDUCTS IN THE COLON MUCOSA.
Mo1913 POTENTIAL USEFULNESS OF MICROBIAL ANALYSIS TARGETING DNA FROM ESOPHAGEAL ENDOSCOPIC WASH SAMPLES AS NONINVASIVE DIAGNOSIS OF ESOPHAGEAL CANCER
Tu1136 A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF CELL-FREE DNA TESTING AND IMAGING FOR PANCREATIC CANCER SCREENING: FINDINGS FROM A MODELING STUDY
Tu1878 CHARACTERISATION OF THE DNA-SENSING CGAS-STING PATHWAY AS A PRO-INFLAMMATORY FACTOR IN THE IBD GUT
365 DNA-HYPOMETHYLATING AGENT DECITABINE COMBINED WITH CAPTEM CHEMOTHERAPY INDUCES REACTIVATION OF TUMOR SUPPRESSOR GENES VIA DOWNREGULATION OF DNMT1 EXPRESSION IN STC-1 NEUROENDOCRINE TUMOR CELLS
Mo1797 EFFECT OF ANTI-TNF AGENTS ON DNA METHYLATION IN PERIPHERAL BLOOD OF PATIENTS WITH INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE
Mo1505 HEPATOCYTE-SPECIFIC DELETION OF DNA DAMAGE-INDUCIBLE TRANSCRIPT 4 (DDIT4) MITIGATES ALCOHOL-INDUCED HEPATIC INJURY
Tu1954 INSULIN AND AMPK-MEDIATED ALTERATIONS IN DNA METHYLATION: IMPLICATIONS FOR OBESITY-ASSOCIATED COLORECTAL CANCER
Tu1448 EXPLORING THE POTENTIAL INFLUENCE OF ETHNICITY AND SEX ON THE PERFORMANCE OF DNA-BASED MOLECULAR ASSAYS FOR PANCREATIC CYST FLUID ANALYSIS
Raccomandazione USPSTF: screening per il cancro al seno
Salire le scale aumenta la longevità e diminuisce i rischi d'infarto
Benefici ottimali facendo 6-10 piani a piedi al giorno
Assistenza di sopravvivenza per persone affette da cancro avanzato o metastatico: linea guida
Oxidative Stress-Induced Damage to RNA and DNA and Mortality in Individuals with Psychiatric Illness
This cohort study evaluates the association between oxidative stress on nucleic acids and all-cause mortality in individuals with and without psychiatric illness.
Rectifying METTL4-Mediated N6-Methyladenine Excess in Mitochondrial DNA Alleviates Heart Failure
Circulation, Ahead of Print. BACKGROUND:Myocardial mitochondrial dysfunction underpins the pathogenesis of heart failure (HF), yet therapeutic options to restore myocardial mitochondrial function are scarce. Epigenetic modifications of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), such as methylation, play a pivotal role in modulating mitochondrial homeostasis. However, their involvement in HF remains unclear.METHODS:Experimental HF models were established through continuous angiotensin II and phenylephrine (AngII/PE) infusion or prolonged myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury. The landscape of N6-methyladenine (6mA) methylation within failing cardiomyocyte mtDNA was characterized using high-resolution mass spectrometry and methylated DNA immunoprecipitation sequencing. A tamoxifen-inducible cardiomyocyte-specificMettl4knockout mouse model and adeno-associated virus vectors designed for cardiomyocyte-targeted manipulation of METTL4 (methyltransferase-like protein 4) expression were used to ascertain the role of mtDNA 6mA and its methyltransferase METTL4 in HF.RESULTS:METTL4 was predominantly localized within adult cardiomyocyte mitochondria. 6mA modifications were significantly more abundant in mtDNA than in nuclear DNA. Postnatal cardiomyocyte maturation presented with a reduction in 6mA levels within mtDNA, coinciding with a decrease in METTL4 expression. However, an increase in both mtDNA 6mA level and METTL4 expression was observed in failing adult cardiomyocytes, suggesting a shift toward a neonatal-like state. METTL4 preferentially targeted mtDNA promoter regions, which resulted in interference with transcription initiation complex assembly, mtDNA transcriptional stalling, and ultimately mitochondrial dysfunction. Amplifying cardiomyocyte mtDNA 6mA through METTL4 overexpression led to spontaneous mitochondrial dysfunction and HF phenotypes. The transcription factor p53 was identified as a direct regulator of METTL4 transcription in response to HF-provoking stress, thereby revealing a stress-responsive mechanism that controls METTL4 expression and mtDNA 6mA. Cardiomyocyte-specific deletion of theMettl4gene eliminated mtDNA 6mA excess, preserved mitochondrial function, and mitigated the development of HF upon continuous infusion of AngII/PE. In addition, specific silencing of METTL4 in cardiomyocytes restored mitochondrial function and offered therapeutic relief in mice with preexisting HF, irrespective of whether the condition was induced by AngII/PE infusion or myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury.CONCLUSIONS:Our findings identify a pivotal role of cardiomyocyte mtDNA 6mA and the corresponding methyltransferase, METTL4, in the pathogenesis of mitochondrial dysfunction and HF. Targeted suppression of METTL4 to rectify mtDNA 6mA excess emerges as a promising strategy for developing mitochondria-focused HF interventions.