Litcius/Paper detail

Discovering functional motifs in long noncoding <scp>RNAs</scp>

Caroline Jane Ross, Igor Ulitsky

2022Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews - RNA26 citationsDOI

Abstract

Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are products of pervasive transcription that closely resemble messenger RNAs on the molecular level, yet function through largely unknown modes of action. The current model is that the function of lncRNAs often relies on specific, typically short, conserved elements, connected by linkers in which specific sequences and/or structures are less important. This notion has fueled the development of both computational and experimental methods focused on the discovery of functional elements within lncRNA genes, based on diverse signals such as evolutionary conservation, predicted structural elements, or the ability to rescue loss-of-function phenotypes. In this review, we outline the main challenges that the different methods need to overcome, describe the recently developed approaches, and discuss their respective limitations. This article is categorized under: RNA Evolution and Genomics > Computational Analyses of RNA RNA Interactions with Proteins and Other Molecules > Protein-RNA Interactions: Functional Implications Regulatory RNAs/RNAi/Riboswitches > Regulatory RNAs.

Topics & Concepts

Computational biologyRiboswitchRNABiologyNon-coding RNAFunction (biology)Functional genomicsLong non-coding RNARNA interferenceGeneGeneticsGenomicsGenomeCancer-related molecular mechanisms researchRNA Research and SplicingRNA modifications and cancer