Abstract

Cancer has traditionally been hailed a genetic disease, dictated by successive genetic aberrations which alter gene expression. Yet, recent advances in molecular sequencing technologies, enabling the characterisation of cancer patient phenotypes on a large scale, have highlighted epigenetic changes as a hallmark of cancer. Epigenetic modifications, including DNA methylation and demethylation and histone modifications, have been found to play a key role in the pathogenesis of a wide variety of cancers through the regulation of chromatin state, gene expression and other nuclear events. Targeting epigenetic aberrations offers remarkable promise as a potential anti-cancer therapy given the reversible nature of epigenetic changes. Hence, epigenetic therapy has emerged as a rapidly advancing field of cancer research. A plethora of epigenetic therapies which inhibit enzymes of post-translational histone modifications, so-called ‘writers’, ‘erasers’ and ‘readers’, have been developed, with several epigenetic inhibitor agents approved for use in routine clinical practice. Epigenetic therapeutics inhibit the methylation or demethylation and acetylation or deacetylation of DNA and histone proteins. Their targets include writers (DNA methyltransferases [DNMT], histone acetyltransferases [HAT] and histone deacetylases [HDAC]) and erasers (histone demethylases [HDM] and histone methylases [HMT]). With new epigenetic mechanisms increasingly being elucidated, a vast array of targets and therapeutics have been brought to the fore. This review discusses recent advances in cancer epigenetics with a focus on molecular targets and mechanisms of action of epigenetic cancer therapeutics.

Highlights

  • BackgroundCancer is a leading cause of avoidable premature death in the United Kingdom (UK) [1]

  • This review aims to highlight recent advances in our understanding of cancer epigenetics and the key targets for and mechanisms of epigenetic cancer therapeutics

  • Cancer epigenetics is a highly complex and rapidly evolving field, with many exciting developments that enhance our understanding of carcinogenesis and disease progression

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Summary

Introduction

Cancer is a leading cause of avoidable premature death in the United Kingdom (UK) [1]. IDH inhibitors AG-120 (ivosidenib) and AG-221 (enasidenib) reduce the accumulation of 2-hydroxygluterate, relieving inhibition of TET-dependent DNA demethylation, leading to downstream anti-cancer effects. HMTIs inhibit histone methylation by HMTs (e.g. EZH2, DOT1-like histone lysine methyltransferase [DOT1L], euchromatic histone lysine methyltransferase 2 [G9A]), leading to reduction of repressive histone marks (e.g. H3K9 and H3K27 methylation) and adoption of an ‘open’ transcriptionally active chromatin state with downstream anti-cancer effects. Erasers, such as HDACs and histone demethylases (HDMs), remove histone acetyl and methyl groups from histones. JmjC domain-containing protein inhibitors (GSK-J1, GSK-J4) induce apoptosis and inhibit tumour growth by increasing global levels of repressive trimethylated H3K27 and downregulating cancerpromoting HOX genes [47,48]

Conclusions
Disclosures
Bates SE
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