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When Long Noncoding Becomes Protein Coding

Corrine Corrina R. Hartford, Ashish Lal

2020Molecular and Cellular Biology157 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Recent advancements in genetic and proteomic technologies have revealed that more of the genome encodes proteins than originally thought possible. Specifically, some putative long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have been misannotated as noncoding. Numerous lncRNAs have been found to contain short open reading frames (sORFs) which have been overlooked because of their small size. Many of these sORFs encode small proteins or micropeptides with fundamental biological importance. These micropeptides can aid in diverse processes, including cell division, transcription regulation, and cell signaling. Here we discuss strategies for establishing the coding potential of putative lncRNAs and describe various functions of known micropeptides.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyENCODEOpen reading frameComputational biologyGenomeGeneticsTranscription (linguistics)GenePeptide sequencePhilosophyLinguisticsCancer-related molecular mechanisms researchCircular RNAs in diseasesRNA modifications and cancer
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