EUROPEAN INSTITUTE OF ONCOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF MILAN · Transgenerational Epigenetics •Evidence...

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Pier Giuseppe Pelicci Milan, Italy EUROPEAN INSTITUTE OF ONCOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF MILAN 11 th Worls Conference on THE FUTURE OF SCIENCE Precision Medicine: present challenges for future cures Venice, September 17-19 2015 Digitizing the Environment: Epigenomic Medicine And the Environmental Impact on Health and Disease

Transcript of EUROPEAN INSTITUTE OF ONCOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF MILAN · Transgenerational Epigenetics •Evidence...

  • Pier Giuseppe Pelicci

    Milan, Italy

    EUROPEAN INSTITUTE OF ONCOLOGY

    UNIVERSITY OF MILAN

    11th Worls Conference on THE FUTURE OF SCIENCE

    Precision Medicine: present challenges for future cures

    Venice, September 17-19 2015

    Digitizing the Environment: Epigenomic Medicine

    And the Environmental Impact on Health and Disease

  • DNA

    (GENOME)

  • 3 billions nucleotides per genome

    0.5% differences among individuals (30 millions nucleotides)

    Specific variants increase disease risk

    (e.g. cancer: ~10-20% of tumors)

    DNA VARIANTS AND DISEASES

  • ENVIRONMENT, LIFE-STYLES

    30% of all diseases associated to known environmental factors or life-styles (OMS)

    (cancer, neurodegenerative, cardiovascular)

    LIFESTYLE

  • American Institute for Cancer Research

    45-50 years

    ~60% of all tumors (specific causes largely unknown)

    ENVIRONMENT, LIFE-STYLES

  • Summary of Mortality from Cancer According to Body-Mass Index for U.S. Women in the Cancer Prevention Study II, 1982 through 1998. Obesity increases

    risk of dying of multiple cancers

    Calle EE et al. N Engl J Med 2003;348:1625-1638.

    The Cancer Prevention Study II

    Risk of death combines -Outcome -Occurrence

  • LIFESTYLE

    Can we measure the effects of environment and lyfestyles on health in individuals?

    Do livings adapt to environmental changes?

    Do they have a memory of environmental exposure?

    Is there a code of the environmental exposure?

    ENVIRONMENT, LIFE-STYLES

  • Cells in body tissue have identical genomes, but different morphology and functions (lineages) (due to different patterns of gene expression) Developmental programs are determined early in embryogenesis and, once established, are maintained for the rest of development and, in the adult, the entire life span (“cellular memory”)

    Cell memory (cell identity)

  • Evolutionary Theory • Adaptation to environmental changes occurs through natural

    selection (competition for survival) New variation arises through random DNA mutation Inheritance occurs through DNA the environment that drives the evolution changes irreversibly

    the genetic information of the germline of all individuals of that population (speciation)

    Adaptation to environmental changes

  • It is not all.. • The environment changes frequently, within the time frame of the

    individual

    • Natural selection is highly inefficient and slow in responding to immediate environmental challenges

    • Fitness to a fluctuating environment requires stable and reversible adaptation that involves the tuning of the genetic information by the soma

    • •

    Adaptation to environmental changes

  • Physiological systems can respond and adapt to new changes in real time

    Countless cases have been documented of Individuals respond to

    their environment by changing their form leaf-mimicking insects that are brown if born in the dry season

    and green in the wet leaf shape changes with soil water and chemistry

    • •

    Adaptation to environmental changes

  • 1. in utero exposure Children of mothers exposed to the Dutch famine of 1944 during the last trimester of pregnancy and the first months of life were less obese than controls, whereas exposure in the first half of pregnancy resulted in higher obesity rates

    Transgenerational Epigenetics •Evidence from plants, animal, and human epidemiological studies support non-genetic multigenerational transmission of phenotypic responses to ancestral experiences

    Non-genetic transmission of memory of parental experience

  • 2. Early in-life exposure • Variation in the food supply during the early life of paternal

    grandparents was associated with variation in mortality rate (and diabetic deaths) in their grandchildren. Only when exposures occurred before puberty (gamete reprogramming?)

    Transgenerational Epigenetics •Evidence from plants, animal, and human epidemiological studies support non-genetic multigenerational transmission of phenotypic responses to ancestral experiences

    Non-genetic transmission of memory of parental experience

  • • Resistance to viruses is a crucial trait for survival of any organism

    • Commonly employed anti-viral defense strategy utilizes the process of RNA interference (RNAi)

    • An RNAi response is observed not only in the infected animals, but also in the progeny of the treated worms

    • small viRNAs are transmitted through many generations • in the absence of the genetic template and of a

    functional small RNA-generating machinery

    Transgenerational Inheritance of an Acquired Small RNA-Based Antiviral Response in C. elegans

    Cell 147, 61248, 2011

    Inheritance of acquired traits (non-genetic inheritance)

    can be reproduced experimentally

  • Modifications in cell functions, which are associated with

    adaptation to environmental changes or cell specialization

    not involving changes in DNA sequence

    inherited to daughter cells and sometimes even across generations (epialleles)

    Where is the code of this non-genetic heredity?

    Epigenetics

  • DNA+ PROTEINS

    CHROMATIN

    (EPI-GENOME)

    DNA

    (GENOME)

  • CELL MEMORY, ADAPTATION

    ENVIRONMENT, LIFE-STYLES

  • GENE EXPRESSION

    PHENOTYPES

    ENVIRONMENT, LIFE-STYLES

    TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS

    CHROMATIN MARKS

  • Chromatin Marks: The histone Code

    (The Epigenetic Code)

  • The histone Code (The Epigenetic Code)

    Technologies are available to read epigenomes

    - A code with hundreds of letters - Combination of words (combinatorial code) depends on individual experiences (environment, life-style)

    - Each person with its own epigenome - Hundreds of epigenomes per each person

  • Technologies are available to read epigenomes

  • UK MRC, Cancer Research UK, BBSRC, Wellcome Trust

    Italy IEO, IFOM, IIT

    Japan NCI, JST

    EC Radboud Univ Nijmegen Medical Centre

    US MGH, Harvard, Broad, NIH

    Korea KNIH

    Canada CIHR and partners

    Germany PT-DLR

  • GENE EXPRESSION

    PHENOTYPES

    ENVIRONMENT, LIFE-STYLES

    TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS

    CHROMATIN ENZYMES

    CHROMATIN MARKS

  • Chromatin Enzymes

  • GENE EXPRESSION

    PHENOTYPES

    ENVIRONMENT, LIFE-STYLES

    TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS

    CHROMATIN ENZYMES

    MARKS Can be modified with drugs

  • 26

    Corp_ID Hit Structure IC50 uM

    DDP_25830

    25

    DDP_25822

    18

    Drugs are available against

    Chromatin Enzymes

    (Epigenetic drugs)

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    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16

    weeks upon weaning

    bod

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    eigh

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    HF DIET HF DIET

    Marco Giorgio

    Obesity activates epigenetic mechanisms that can be reverted targeting chromatin enzymes

  • P=0.0380

    CR prolongs survival of leukemic mice

    Inject Leukemias Luca Mazzarella, Rani Pallavi

  • Tota

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    Animal death

    days

    Two distinct responses during CR treatment

  • Tota

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    Metabolic Adaptiation

    Leukemia cells adapt to Caloric Restriction

  • Many OXPHOS genes are targets of a specific Lysine demethylase in leukemia cells

  • P=0.0494

    ctrl CR+ LSD1

    No evidence of leukemic cells in CR+LSD1

    Lysine-demethylase inhibition completely eradicates disease

  • Tota

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    Inhibition of Metabolic Adaptiation

    Inhibition of metabolic adaptation to CR Induces eradication of Leukemias

    Cure

  • Environment, epigenomics, health

    - Environmental changes, parental/individual experiences and life-styles induce stable phenotypes, including diseases (or disease

    predisposition) stable epigenomic changes

    - Epigenomic changes can be measured (personalized disease

    risk-assessment)

    - Epigenomic changes can be reverted with drugs (personalized epigenetic treatment of disease-risk or diseases)

    - Dozens of epigenomic – disease correlations already identified (Hyperthension, diabetes, obesity, schizofrenia and bipolar disorders, Alheimer’s disease, asthma, coronary diseases