Home > Journals > Medicine > Bulletin du cancer > summary
 
      Advanced search    Shopping cart    French version 
 
Latest books
Catalogue/Search
Collections
All journals
Medicine
Bulletin du Cancer
- Current issue
- Archives
- Subscribe
- Order an issue
- More information
Biology and research
Public health
Agronomy and biotech.
My account
Forgotten password?
Online account   activation
Subscribe
Licences IP
- Instructions for use
- Estimate request form
- Licence agreement
Order an issue
Pay-per-view articles
Newsletters
How can I publish?
Journals
Books
Help for advertisers
Foreign rights
Book sales agents



 

Texte intégral de l'article
 
Printable version

RNA and cancer


Bulletin du Cancer. Volume 95, Number 1, 33-41, janvier 2008, synthèse

Résumé   Article gratuit  

Author(s) : Philippe Jeanteur

Summary : The aim of this review is to draw the attention to the numerous steps of gene expression which operate at the RNA level and which are significant drivers of the transformation process. The analysis of genomic abnormalities was at first limited to gross chromosomal alterations and to DNA point mutations. Then came the era of transciptomes which were originally believed, since they were mRNAs, to be a faithful reflection of the expressed proteins. As a matter of fact, this first-generation transcriptomics gave only a global, quantitative, assessment of gene expression at a given locus but overlooked the qualitative diversity of the messenger population generated by alternative splicing. We will show that beyond their essential role in the regulation of functions specific to metazoan like development, alternative splicing brings about an important vulnerability to mutations which is at the origin of many pathologies including cancer. The second aspect covered by this review is that of a rather novel category of RNAs, the microRNAs which, although non-coding, functionally behave as oncogenes or tumor suppressors through the negative control they exert on conventional oncogenes or suppressors. Beyond their diagnostic and pronostic interest, these two mechanisms offer entirely novel potential therapeutic targets.

Keywords : alternative splicing, microRNAs, gene expression, oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes

 

About us - Contact us - Conditions of use - Secure payment
Latest news - Conferences
Copyright © 2007 John Libbey Eurotext - All rights reserved
[ Legal information - Powered by Dolomède ]