← Back to search

RNA-binding proteins in neurodegeneration: Seq and you shall receive.

Trends in neurosciences · 2015 · Vol. 38 (4) · pp. 226-36

Abstract

As critical players in gene regulation, RNA binding proteins (RBPs) are taking center stage in our understanding of cellular function and disease. In our era of bench-top sequencers and unprecedented computational power, biological questions can be addressed in a systematic, genome-wide manner. Development of high-throughput sequencing (Seq) methodologies provides unparalleled potential to discover new mechanisms of disease-associated perturbations of RNA homeostasis. Complementary to candidate single-gene studies, these innovative technologies may elicit the discovery of unexpected mechanisms, and enable us to determine the widespread influence of the multifunctional RBPs on their targets. Given that the disruption of RNA processing is increasingly implicated in neurological diseases, these approaches will continue to provide insights into the roles of RBPs in disease pathogenesis.

Publication Types

["Journal Article", "Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural", "Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't", "Review"]

Keywords

MeSH Terms

["Animals", "High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing", "Humans", "Neurodegenerative Diseases", "RNA Processing, Post-Transcriptional", "RNA-Binding Proteins"]

Funding

R01 HG004659 NHGRI NIH HHS (United States)
U54 HG007005 NHGRI NIH HHS (United States)
U54HG007005 NHGRI NIH HHS (United States)
R01 NS075449 NINDS NIH HHS (United States)
R01 NS087227 NINDS NIH HHS (United States)
HG004659 NHGRI NIH HHS (United States)
NS075449 NINDS NIH HHS (United States)
P50 AG005131 NIA NIH HHS (United States)
R01NS087227 NINDS NIH HHS (United States)
P50AG005131 NIA NIH HHS (United States)