Litcius/Paper detail

Cyclin‐dependent kinases: Masters of the eukaryotic universe

Aleksandra J. Pluta, Cécilia Studniarek, Shona Murphy, Chris J. Norbury

2023Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews - RNA36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A family of structurally related cyclin-dependent protein kinases (CDKs) drives many aspects of eukaryotic cell function. Much of the literature in this area has considered individual members of this family to act primarily either as regulators of the cell cycle, the context in which CDKs were first discovered, or as regulators of transcription. Until recently, CDK7 was the only clear example of a CDK that functions in both processes. However, new data points to several "cell-cycle" CDKs having important roles in transcription and some "transcriptional" CDKs having cell cycle-related targets. For example, novel functions in transcription have been demonstrated for the archetypal cell cycle regulator CDK1. The increasing evidence of the overlap between these two CDK types suggests that they might play a critical role in coordinating the two processes. Here we review the canonical functions of cell-cycle and transcriptional CDKs, and provide an update on how these kinases collaborate to perform important cellular functions. We also provide a brief overview of how dysregulation of CDKs contributes to carcinogenesis, and possible treatment avenues. This article is categorized under: RNA Interactions with Proteins and Other Molecules > RNA-Protein Complexes RNA Processing > 3' End Processing RNA Processing > Splicing Regulation/Alternative Splicing.

Topics & Concepts

Cyclin-dependent kinaseEukaryotic transcriptionCyclin-dependent kinase 1Cell biologyBiologyPolo-like kinaseTranscription (linguistics)Cell cycleRNA splicingAlternative splicingComputational biologyRNAGeneticsPromoterCellGene expressionMessenger RNAGeneLinguisticsPhilosophyCancer-related Molecular PathwaysRNA modifications and cancerRNA Research and Splicing