Regulation of gene expression in trypanosomatids: living with polycistronic transcription
Author(s) -
Christine Clayton
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
open biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.078
H-Index - 53
ISSN - 2046-2441
DOI - 10.1098/rsob.190072
Subject(s) - biology , polyadenylation , messenger rna , transcription (linguistics) , rna splicing , genetics , rna binding protein , rna polymerase ii , translation (biology) , gene , gene expression , post transcriptional regulation , mature messenger rna , microbiology and biotechnology , rna , promoter , linguistics , philosophy
In trypanosomes, RNA polymerase II transcription is polycistronic and individual mRNAs are excised by trans -splicing and polyadenylation. The lack of individual gene transcription control is compensated by control of mRNA processing, translation and degradation. Although the basic mechanisms of mRNA decay and translation are evolutionarily conserved, there are also unique aspects, such as the existence of six cap-binding translation initiation factor homologues, a novel decapping enzyme and an mRNA stabilizing complex that is recruited by RNA-binding proteins. High-throughput analyses have identified nearly a hundred regulatory mRNA-binding proteins, making trypanosomes valuable as a model system to investigate post-transcriptional regulation.
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