FEBS Letters
Volume 582, Issue 14 , Pages 1977-1986, 18 June 2008

RNA-binding proteins and post-transcriptional gene regulation

Edited by Ulrike Kutay

Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6148, United States

Received 25 February 2008; accepted 3 March 2008. published online 13 March 2008.

Abstract 

RNAs in cells are associated with RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) to form ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes. The RBPs influence the structure and interactions of the RNAs and play critical roles in their biogenesis, stability, function, transport and cellular localization. Eukaryotic cells encode a large number of RBPs (thousands in vertebrates), each of which has unique RNA-binding activity and protein–protein interaction characteristics. The remarkable diversity of RBPs, which appears to have increased during evolution in parallel to the increase in the number of introns, allows eukaryotic cells to utilize them in an enormous array of combinations giving rise to a unique RNP for each RNA. In this short review, we focus on the RBPs that interact with pre-mRNAs and mRNAs and discuss their roles in the regulation of post-transcriptional gene expression.

Keywords: RNA, Ribonucleoprotein, RNP, RNA-binding protein, RNA processing, Gene expression

Abbreviations: RBP, RNA-binding protein, RNP, ribonucleoprotein, hnRNP, heterogeneous ribonucleoprotein, mRNP, messenger ribonucleoprotein, EJC, exon-junction complex, UTR, untranslated region

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PII: S0014-5793(08)00207-X

doi:10.1016/j.febslet.2008.03.004

FEBS Letters
Volume 582, Issue 14 , Pages 1977-1986, 18 June 2008