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Calcium (Ca2+) signaling controls a wide range of cellular processes, including the hallmarks of cancer. The Ca2+ signaling system encompasses several types of proteins, such as receptors, channels, pumps, exchangers, buffers, and sensors, of which several are mutated or with altered expression in cancer cells. Since epigenetic mechanisms are disrupted in all stages of carcinogenesis, and reversibly regulate gene expression, they have been studied by different research groups to understand their role in Ca2+ signaling remodeling in cancer cells and the carcinogenic process. In this review, we link Ca2+ signaling, cancer, and epigenetics fields to generate a comprehensive landscape of this complex group of diseases.

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This page is a summary of: Calcium signaling and epigenetics: A key point to understand carcinogenesis, Cell Calcium, November 2020, Elsevier,
DOI: 10.1016/j.ceca.2020.102285.
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