Endogenous microRNA sponges: evidence and controversy
Garvan Institute of Medical Research
Abstract
Empirical evidence supporting the competitive endogenous RNA (ceRNA) hypothesis is accumulating, but studies that model transcriptome-wide binding site abundance suggest that physiological expression changes of most individual transcripts do not compromise microRNA (miRNA) activity. This Review aims to critically evaluate the evidence for and against the ceRNA hypothesis to assess the impact of endogenous miRNA-sponge interactions. The competitive endogenous RNA (ceRNA) hypothesis proposes that transcripts with shared microRNA (miRNA) binding sites compete for post-transcriptional control. This hypothesis has gained substantial attention as a unifying function for long non-coding RNAs, pseudogene transcripts…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 58.58
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 149
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Competing endogenous RNA
- Biology
- microRNA
- Pseudogene
- Computational biology
- Transcriptome
- Endogeny
- Long non-coding RNA