Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Posttranscriptional regulation is an important control mechanism governing gene expression in neurons. We recently demonstrated that
VCX-A
, a protein implicated in X-linked mental retardation, is an RNA-binding protein that specifically binds the 5' end of capped mRNAs to prevent their decapping and decay. Previously, expression of
VCX-A
was reported to be testes restricted. Consistent with a role in cognitive function, we demonstrate that
VCX-A
is ubiquitously expressed in human tissues including the brain. Moreover, retinoic acid-induced differentiation of human SH-SY5Y
neuroblastoma
cells promoted the accumulation of
VCX-A
in distinct cytoplasmic foci within neurites that colocalize with staufen1-containing RNA granules, suggesting a role in translational suppression and/or mRNA transport. Exogenous expression of
VCX-A
in rat primary hippocampal neurons, which normally do not express the primate-restricted VCX proteins, promoted neurite arborization, and shRNA-directed knockdown of the VCX genes in SH-SY5Y cells resulted in a reduction of both primary and secondary neurite projections upon differentiation. We propose that the cap-binding property of
VCX-A
reflects a role of this protein in mRNA translational regulation. In support of this hypothesized role, we demonstrate that
VCX-A
can specifically bind a subset of mRNAs involved in neuritogenesis and is also capable of promoting translational silencing. Thus,
VCX-A
contains the capacity to modulate the stability and translation of a subset of target mRNAs involved in neuronal differentiation and arborization. It is plausible that defects of these functions in the absence of the VCX genes could contribute to a mental retardation phenotype.
...
PMID:Modulation of neuritogenesis by a protein implicated in X-linked mental retardation. 1981 18