[HTML][HTML] A ceRNA hypothesis: the Rosetta Stone of a hidden RNA language?

L Salmena, L Poliseno, Y Tay, L Kats, PP Pandolfi - cell, 2011 - cell.com
L Salmena, L Poliseno, Y Tay, L Kats, PP Pandolfi
cell, 2011cell.com
Here, we present a unifying hypothesis about how messenger RNAs, transcribed
pseudogenes, and long noncoding RNAs" talk" to each other using microRNA response
elements (MREs) as letters of a new language. We propose that this" competing
endogenous RNA"(ceRNA) activity forms a large-scale regulatory network across the
transcriptome, greatly expanding the functional genetic information in the human genome
and playing important roles in pathological conditions, such as cancer.
Here, we present a unifying hypothesis about how messenger RNAs, transcribed pseudogenes, and long noncoding RNAs "talk" to each other using microRNA response elements (MREs) as letters of a new language. We propose that this "competing endogenous RNA" (ceRNA) activity forms a large-scale regulatory network across the transcriptome, greatly expanding the functional genetic information in the human genome and playing important roles in pathological conditions, such as cancer.
cell.com