Litcius/Paper detail

Transcriptional adaptation: where mRNA decay meets genetic compensation

Lara Falcucci, Brian Juvik, Didier Y. R. Stainier

2025Current Opinion in Genetics & Development12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a translation-coupled quality control mechanism that safeguards cells against faulty transcripts that could lead to truncated and potentially harmful proteins. However, we posit that there is another side to NMD: it does not just clear away defective transcripts, it also triggers a form of genetic compensation known as transcriptional adaptation (TA). This recently discovered cellular response operates independently of protein loss. Instead, mutant mRNA decay can lead to the upregulation of functional paralogs, thereby compensating for the loss of the mutated gene. Consequently, TA could play a prominent role in genotype-phenotype correlations in human genetic diseases.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyAdaptation (eye)Messenger RNANonsense-mediated decayDosage compensationComputational biologyGeneticsCompensation (psychology)Cell biologyEvolutionary biologyGene expressionGeneRNANeurosciencePsychoanalysisRNA splicingPsychologyRNA Research and SplicingRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsCRISPR and Genetic Engineering