Gene regulation by the act of long non-coding RNA transcription
Austrian Academy of Sciences · CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine
Abstract
Long non-protein-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) are proposed to be the largest transcript class in the mouse and human transcriptomes. Two important questions are whether all lncRNAs are functional and how they could exert a function. Several lncRNAs have been shown to function through their product, but this is not the only possible mode of action. In this review we focus on a role for the process of lncRNA transcription, independent of the lncRNA product, in regulating protein-coding-gene activity in cis. We discuss examples where lncRNA transcription leads to gene silencing or activation, and describe strategies to determine if the lncRNA product or its transcription causes the regulatory effect.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 16.40
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 129
Authors
4- AEAleksandra E. KornienkoCorresponding
Austrian Academy of Sciences, CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine
- PGPhilipp Guenzl
Austrian Academy of Sciences, CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine
- DPDenise P. Barlow
Austrian Academy of Sciences, CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine
- FMFlorian M. Pauler
Austrian Academy of Sciences, CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine
Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Gene silencing
- Transcription (linguistics)
- Gene
- Genetics
- Long non-coding RNA
- Computational biology
- Regulation of gene expression