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Curriculum vitae of CUG binding protein 1 (CELF1) in homeostasis and diseases: a systematic review

Wan‐Jia Qin, Jinjin Shi, Ru-Yi Chen, Changyun Li, Yan-Jun Liu, Jianfei Lu, Guan‐Jun Yang, Jia-Feng Cao, Jiong Chen

2024Cellular & Molecular Biology Letters13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) are kinds of proteins with either singular or multiple RNA-binding domains (RBDs), and they can assembly into ribonucleic acid-protein complexes, which mediate transportation, editing, splicing, stabilization, translational efficiency, or epigenetic modifications of their binding RNA partners, and thereby modulate various physiological and pathological processes. CUG-BP, Elav-like family 1 (CELF1) is a member of the CELF family of RBPs with high affinity to the GU-rich elements in mRNA, and thus exerting control over critical processes including mRNA splicing, translation, and decay. Mounting studies support that CELF1 is correlated with occurrence, genesis and development and represents a potential therapeutical target for these malignant diseases. Herein, we present the structure and function of CELF1, outline its role and regulatory mechanisms in varieties of homeostasis and diseases, summarize the identified CELF1 regulators and their structure-activity relationships, and prospect the current challenges and their solutions during studies on CELF1 functions and corresponding drug discovery, which will facilitate the establishment of a targeted regulatory network for CELF1 in diseases and advance CELF1 as a potential drug target for disease therapy.

Topics & Concepts

RNA-binding proteinRNA splicingEpigeneticsTranslation (biology)Alternative splicingBiologyMessenger RNAComputational biologyRNATranslational regulationCell biologyGeneticsGeneRNA Research and SplicingRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsRNA modifications and cancer
Curriculum vitae of CUG binding protein 1 (CELF1) in homeostasis and diseases: a systematic review | Litcius