Gene-Specific Epigenetic Regulation in Serious Infections with Systemic Inflammation
Author(s) -
Charles E. McCall,
Barbara K. Yoza,
Tiefu Liu,
Mohamed El Gazzar
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of innate immunity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.078
H-Index - 64
eISSN - 1662-8128
pISSN - 1662-811X
DOI - 10.1159/000314077
Subject(s) - epigenetics , biology , inflammation , systemic inflammation , euchromatin , immunology , heterochromatin , gene , innate immune system , genetics , immune system , chromatin
Inflammation is a fundamental biologic process that is evolutionally conserved by a germ line code. The interplay between epigenetics and environment directs the code into temporally distinct inflammatory responses, which can be acute or chronic. Here, we discuss the epigenetic processes of innate immune cells during serious infections with systemic inflammation in four stages: homeostasis, incitement, evolution, and resolution. We describe feed-forward loops of serious infections with systemic inflammation that create gene-specific silent facultative heterochromatin and active euchromatin according to gene function, and speculate on the role of epigenetics in survival.
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