Adaptation or Malignant Transformation: The Two Faces of Epigenetically Mediated Response to Stress
Adaptive response to stress is a fundamental property of living systems. At the cellular level, many different types of stress elicit an essentially limited repertoire of adaptive responses. Epigenetic changes are the main mechanism for medium- to long-term adaptation to accumulated (intense, long-t...
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Online Access: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/954060 |
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doaj-593a63d7ed5b44eb8c46c0f640ff0a5b2020-11-24T20:59:06ZengHindawi LimitedBioMed Research International2314-61332314-61412013-01-01201310.1155/2013/954060954060Adaptation or Malignant Transformation: The Two Faces of Epigenetically Mediated Response to StressAleksandar Vojta0Vlatka Zoldoš1Department of Molecular Biology, Faculty of Science, University of Zagreb, Horvatovac 102a, HR-10000 Zagreb, CroatiaDepartment of Molecular Biology, Faculty of Science, University of Zagreb, Horvatovac 102a, HR-10000 Zagreb, CroatiaAdaptive response to stress is a fundamental property of living systems. At the cellular level, many different types of stress elicit an essentially limited repertoire of adaptive responses. Epigenetic changes are the main mechanism for medium- to long-term adaptation to accumulated (intense, long-term, or repeated) stress. We propose the adaptive deregulation of the epigenome in response to stress (ADERS) hypothesis which assumes that the unspecific adaptive stress response grows stronger with the increasing stress level, epigenetically activating response gene clusters while progressively deregulating other cellular processes. The balance between the unspecific adaptive response and the general epigenetic deregulation is critical because a strong response can lead to pathology, particularly to malignant transformation. The main idea of our hypothesis is the continuum traversed by a cell subjected to accumulated stress, which lies between an unspecific adaptive response and pathological deregulation—the two extremes sharing the same underlying cause, which is a manifestation of a unified epigenetically mediated adaptive response to stress. The evolutionary potential of epigenetic regulation in multigenerational adaptation is speculatively discussed in the light of neo-Lamarckism. Finally, an approach to testing the proposed hypothesis is presented, relying on either the publicly available datasets or on conducting new experiments.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/954060 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Aleksandar Vojta Vlatka Zoldoš |
spellingShingle |
Aleksandar Vojta Vlatka Zoldoš Adaptation or Malignant Transformation: The Two Faces of Epigenetically Mediated Response to Stress BioMed Research International |
author_facet |
Aleksandar Vojta Vlatka Zoldoš |
author_sort |
Aleksandar Vojta |
title |
Adaptation or Malignant Transformation: The Two Faces of Epigenetically Mediated Response to Stress |
title_short |
Adaptation or Malignant Transformation: The Two Faces of Epigenetically Mediated Response to Stress |
title_full |
Adaptation or Malignant Transformation: The Two Faces of Epigenetically Mediated Response to Stress |
title_fullStr |
Adaptation or Malignant Transformation: The Two Faces of Epigenetically Mediated Response to Stress |
title_full_unstemmed |
Adaptation or Malignant Transformation: The Two Faces of Epigenetically Mediated Response to Stress |
title_sort |
adaptation or malignant transformation: the two faces of epigenetically mediated response to stress |
publisher |
Hindawi Limited |
series |
BioMed Research International |
issn |
2314-6133 2314-6141 |
publishDate |
2013-01-01 |
description |
Adaptive response to stress is a fundamental property of living systems. At the cellular level, many different types of stress elicit an essentially limited repertoire of adaptive responses. Epigenetic changes are the main mechanism for medium- to long-term adaptation to accumulated (intense, long-term, or repeated) stress. We propose the adaptive deregulation of the epigenome in response to stress (ADERS) hypothesis which assumes that the unspecific adaptive stress response grows stronger with the increasing stress level, epigenetically activating response gene clusters while progressively deregulating other cellular processes. The balance between the unspecific adaptive response and the general epigenetic deregulation is critical because a strong response can lead to pathology, particularly to malignant transformation. The main idea of our hypothesis is the continuum traversed by a cell subjected to accumulated stress, which lies between an unspecific adaptive response and pathological deregulation—the two extremes sharing the same underlying cause, which is a manifestation of a unified epigenetically mediated adaptive response to stress. The evolutionary potential of epigenetic regulation in multigenerational adaptation is speculatively discussed in the light of neo-Lamarckism. Finally, an approach to testing the proposed hypothesis is presented, relying on either the publicly available datasets or on conducting new experiments. |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/954060 |
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