The Long and the Short of It: NEAT1 and Cancer Cell Metabolism

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Abstract

The long noncoding RNA NEAT1 is known to be heavily dysregulated in many cancers. A single exon gene produces two isoforms, NEAT1_1 and NEAT1_2, through alternative 3′-end processing. As the longer isoform, NEAT1_2 is an essential scaffold for nuclear paraspeckle formation. It was previously thought that the short NEAT1_1 isoform only exists to keep the NEAT1 locus active for rapid paraspeckle formation. However, a recent glycolysis-enhancing function for NEAT1_1, contributing to cancer cell proliferation and the Warburg effect, has been demonstrated. Previous studies have mainly focused on quantifying total NEAT1 and NEAT1_2 expression levels. However, in light of the NEAT1_1 role in cancer cell metabolism, the contribution from specific NEAT1 isoforms is no longer clear. Here, the roles of NEAT1_1 and NEAT1_2 in metabolism and cancer progression are discussed.

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Smith, N. E., Spencer-Merris, P., Fox, A. H., Petersen, J., & Michael, M. Z. (2022, September 1). The Long and the Short of It: NEAT1 and Cancer Cell Metabolism. Cancers. MDPI. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14184388

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