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The Role of DEAD-Box ATPases in Gene Expression and the Regulation of RNA–Protein Condensates

Karsten Weis, Maria Hondele

2022Annual Review of Biochemistry69 citationsDOI

Abstract

DEAD-box ATPases constitute a very large protein family present in all cells, often in great abundance. From bacteria to humans, they play critical roles in many aspects of RNA metabolism, and due to their widespread importance in RNA biology, they have been characterized in great detail at both the structural and biochemical levels. DEAD-box proteins function as RNA-dependent ATPases that can unwind short duplexes of RNA, remodel ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes, or act as clamps to promote RNP assembly. Yet, it often remains enigmatic how individual DEAD-box proteins mechanistically contribute to specific RNA-processing steps. Here, we review the role of DEAD-box ATPases in the regulation of gene expression and propose that one common function of these enzymes is in the regulation of liquid-liquid phase separation of RNP condensates.

Topics & Concepts

DEAD boxRNARibonucleoproteinBiologyCell biologyATPaseGene expressionRNA-binding proteinFunction (biology)Regulation of gene expressionGeneGeneticsEnzymeBiochemistryHelicaseRNA Research and SplicingRNA modifications and cancerRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms
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