Litcius/Paper detail

The pseudogenes of eukaryotic translation elongation factors (EEFs): Role in cancer and other human diseases

Luigi Cristiano

2021Genes & Diseases39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

, are coding-genes that play a central role in the elongation step of translation but are often altered in cancer. Less investigated are their pseudogenes. Recently, it was demonstrated that pseudogenes have a key regulatory role in the cell, especially via non-coding RNAs, and that the aberrant expression of ncRNAs has an important role in cancer development and progression. The present review paper, for the first time, collects all that published about the EEFs pseudogenes to create a base for future investigations. For most of them, the studies are in their infancy, while for others the studies suggest their involvement in normal cell physiology but also in various human diseases. However, more investigations are needed to understand their functions in both normal and cancer cells and to define which can be useful biomarkers or therapeutic targets.

Topics & Concepts

PseudogeneBiologyTranslation (biology)GeneCancerComputational biologyCell biologyCancer researchGeneticsMessenger RNAGenomeCancer-related molecular mechanisms researchRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsRNA modifications and cancer