Syncytin

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<b> Cancer </b>
<b> Cancer </b>
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Syncytin-1 has been correlated to several different kinds of cancers including breast cancer, carcinomas, and endometrial cancers. As mentioned above, the env gene of syncytin-1 can become activated and promote the production of cancerous cells. Overexpression in syncytin-1 contributes to increased proliferation, metastasis, and the growth of tumors in individuals due to the methylation of DNA and the 5’LTR of the syncytin gene. The overmethylation contributes to the silencing of the tumor-suppressing gene <ref name= 'cancer'>doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2019.01150</ref>. As a result, if both tumor suppressor genes in a cell contain a mutation, then the suppressor gene is deactivated. With the tumor suppressor gene losing function, cells may grow and divide unregulated, resulting in cancer.
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Syncytin-1 has been correlated to several different kinds of cancers including breast cancer, carcinomas, and endometrial cancers. As mentioned above, the env gene of syncytin-1 can become activated and promote the production of cancerous cells. Overexpression in syncytin-1 contributes to increased proliferation, metastasis, and the growth of tumors in individuals due to the methylation of DNA and the 5’LTR of the syncytin gene. The overmethylation contributes to the silencing of the tumor-suppressing gene <ref name= 'cancer'>Locke, W. J., Guanzon, D., Ma, C., Liew, Y. J., Duesing, K. R., Fung, K. Y. C., &amp; Ross, J. P. (2019, November 14). DNA methylation cancer biomarkers: Translation to the clinic. Frontiers. Retrieved April 27, 2022, from https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fgene.2019.01150/full#:~:text=Hypermethylation%20can%20drive%20the%20silencing,et%20al.%2C%202015). </ref>. As a result, if both tumor suppressor genes in a cell contain a mutation, then the suppressor gene is deactivated. With the tumor suppressor gene losing function, cells may grow and divide unregulated, resulting in cancer.

Revision as of 02:29, 28 April 2022

Syncytin 1

Syncytin 1 Structure

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References

  1. Locke, W. J., Guanzon, D., Ma, C., Liew, Y. J., Duesing, K. R., Fung, K. Y. C., & Ross, J. P. (2019, November 14). DNA methylation cancer biomarkers: Translation to the clinic. Frontiers. Retrieved April 27, 2022, from https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fgene.2019.01150/full#:~:text=Hypermethylation%20can%20drive%20the%20silencing,et%20al.%2C%202015).

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Silina Lokmic, Michal Harel, Jaime Prilusky

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