Exposed: Environmental Echoes in Health - How Toxins Leave Their Cancerous Marks - podcast episode cover

Exposed: Environmental Echoes in Health - How Toxins Leave Their Cancerous Marks

Oct 19, 202214 min
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Episode description

Through epigenetic mechanisms, some environmental toxicants, such as heavy metals, reversibly alter gene expression patterns that then drive cancer progression. In this episode, Yvonne Fondufe-Mittendorf discusses her work studying environmental toxicants and their effects on DNA methylation and chromatin structure.

 

Welcome to Exposed: Environmental Echoes in Health, a special edition podcast series produced by The Scientist’s Creative Services Team. This series is brought to you by Van Andel Institute, an independent biomedical research institute devoted to improving human health for generations to come.

While the human body’s cells all use the same set of instructions, they can end up with wildly different features and functions. Beyond the information stored in DNA, factors within a person’s environment, including chemicals, microbes, and their diet, change how cells work. In this series, Niki Spahich from The Scientist’s Creative Services Team talks to researchers from Van Andel Institute who investigate how the environment and behavior change cellular functions through epigenetic processes.

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Exposed: Environmental Echoes in Health - How Toxins Leave Their Cancerous Marks | The Scientist’s LabTalk podcast - Listen or read transcript on Metacast