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Metabolism and gene regulation are vital processes that need to be tightly coordinated to maintain homeostasis or to enable growth and development. Recent research has begun to reveal the surprisingly interlaced relationship between metabolism and gene expression control. Because key metabolites are cofactors or cosubstrates of chromatin-modifying enzymes, changes in their concentrations can modulate chromatin states and gene expression. Additionally, an increasing number of key metabolic enzymes are found to directly regulate chromatin and transcription in response to changes in metabolic state. These include enzymes that fuel chromatin-associated metabolism and moonlighting enzymes that function as transcription factors, independent of their enzymatic activity. Conversely, accumulating evidence suggests that chromatin itself serves key metabolic functions, independent of transcriptional regulation. Here, we discuss the bidirectional interface between metabolism and chromatin and its corruption in cancer cells.
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