Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1946693 Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Gene Regulatory Mechanisms 2011 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Germline cell differentiation is controlled by a specific set of genes whose expression is tightly locked into the repressed state in somatic cells. Large-scale epigenome alterations, now evidenced in nearly all cancers, lead to aberrant activation of these normally silenced genes, as attested by the many reports describing the expression of testis-specific factors, known as cancer-testis genes, in various cancer cells. Here, based on the literature, we argue that off-context activity of some of the testis-specific epigenome regulators can reprogram the somatic cell epigenome toward a malignant state by favoring self-renewal and sustaining cell proliferation under stressful conditions, thereby constituting a major oncogenic mechanism.

Research highlights► This review discusses the very exciting possibility that the off-context activity of germline-specific genes initiates a process of epigenetic reprogramming and could strongly contribute to malignant transformation.

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