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DNAXplore | Human DNA Research: Epigenetic Control of Cell Identity in Aging and Regenerative Processes

DNAXplore | Human DNA Research focuses on how human cells reshape their identity during aging and regenerative processes. In DNAXplore’s view, cellular identity reprogramming is a coordinated set of changes where transcription, epigenetics, and metabolism shift together through integrated regulatory networks.

Master regulators keep transitions on track

Key regulators such as TP53 help preserve genomic integrity during state changes. This limits mutation accumulation while maintaining cellular stability as chromatin is remodeled, transcriptional programs are rewired, and signaling adapts.

Methylation systems guide epigenetic resetting

DNAXplore | Human DNA Research highlights the role of DNA methylation maintenance, especially DNMT1, which preserves gene expression patterns across cell divisions while supporting controlled epigenetic resetting. Active DNA demethylation, including TET2 activity, further enables more complete reconfiguration of regulatory landscapes, including enhancer control—helping balance lineage plasticity under different biological conditions.

For the full discussion, visit DNAXplore | Human DNA Research.

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DNAXplore | Human DNA Research: Epigenetic Control of Cell Identity in Aging and Regenerative Processes | Intelloidea