Mechanism of long noncoding RNAs as transcriptional regulators in cancer

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Abstract

Dysregulation of gene expression, often interpreted by gene transcription as an endpoint response, is tightly associated with human cancer. Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), derived from the noncoding elements in the genome and appeared no less than 200nt in length, have emerged as a novel class of pivotal regulatory component. Recently, great attention has been paid to the cancer-related lncRNAs and growing evidence have shown that lncRNAs act as key transcriptional regulators in cancer cells through diverse mechanisms. Here, we focus on the nucleus-expressed lncRNAs and summarize their molecular mechanisms in transcriptional control during tumorigenesis and cancer metastasis. Six major mechanisms will be discussed in this review: association with transcriptional factor, modulating DNA methylation or histone modification enzyme, influencing on chromatin remodelling complex, facilitating chromosomal looping, interaction with RNA polymerase and direct association with promoter.

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Huang, Y., Guo, Q., Ding, X. P., & Wang, X. (2020, November 1). Mechanism of long noncoding RNAs as transcriptional regulators in cancer. RNA Biology. Bellwether Publishing, Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1080/15476286.2019.1710405

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