TB Research

Methylation in Mycobacterium-host interaction and implications for novel control measures

Asaad M, Abo-Kadoum MA, Nzungize L, Uae M, Nzaou SAE, Xie J

Infection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases · 2020-05

Abstract

Methylation epigenetically regulates many pivotal biological processes. Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the pathogen of tuberculosis, can modulate host methylome. The methylated genes, sites, signaling pathway, chromatin remodeling, especially the immune related genes such as cytokines and chemokines, drug resistance and vaccines efficacy relevant genes were summarized in this paper. The results showed that methylation plays important roles in immune evasion, pathogenesis, persistence, disease progression, active, drug responder and non-responder. This will inform better practice for the development of new drugs and vaccines to eradicate tuberculosis.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • Tuberculosis
  • Histones
  • Tuberculosis Vaccines
  • Drug Resistance, Bacterial
  • DNA Methylation
  • Gene Expression Regulation
  • Epigenesis, Genetic
  • Methylation
  • Host-Pathogen Interactions
  • Immune Evasion