About this Research Topic
Nutrients and metabolites regulate physiology and health by directly modifying chromatin, the protein–DNA complex that packages our genome. The dynamic nature of chromatin is the basis of epigenetics, which can confer long-term pathological changes in gene activity. Nutrients thus impact our body, but we have little insight of how specific organs and cell types change gene activity as our nutrition changes. Although we know that metabolism and chromatin intertwine, insight into molecular mechanisms is incomplete and potential drug targets are only starting to emerge. This limits our ability to assess risk, prevent and treat metabolic diseases. Therefore, understanding how cellular metabolites regulate genes is at the forefront of our needs if we aim to target the pathophysiology of multiple lifestyle-linked complex diseases. This way, metabolic enzymes, gene regulators and chromatin factors critically determine how nutrients affect health and disease and these proteins represent excellent drug targets. This Research Topic aims to understand how chromatin is steered by metabolism to sustain health or cause disease, and to exploit our new knowledge and expertise to develop new therapies.
Keywords: Metabolism, epigenetics, cancer, diabetes, transcription
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.