4.5 Review

Transcription factors: Bridge between cell signaling and gene regulation

Journal

PROTEOMICS
Volume 21, Issue 23-24, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pmic.202000034

Keywords

gene regulation; gene regulatory networks; literature bias; signaling; transcription factors; postranslational modifications; multiomics

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL

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This review discusses the role of transcription factors as a link between signaling pathways and gene regulation. TFs play a crucial role in modulating cell transcriptional programs, but there are technical and conceptual challenges in measuring TF activity. Many TFs are understudied in research, leading to a bias in our knowledge of known TF targets. TFs act as a bridge between the fields of gene regulation and signaling, and separating these fields impedes our understanding of cell functions.
Transcription factors (TFs) are key regulators of intrinsic cellular processes, such as differentiation and development, and of the cellular response to external perturbation through signaling pathways. In this review we focus on the role of TFs as a link between signaling pathways and gene regulation. Cell signaling tends to result in the modulation of a set of TFs that then lead to changes in the cell's transcriptional program. We highlight the molecular layers at which TF activity can be measured and the associated technical and conceptual challenges. These layers include post-translational modifications (PTMs) of the TF, regulation of TF binding to DNA through chromatin accessibility and epigenetics, and expression of target genes. We highlight that a large number of TFs are understudied in both signaling and gene regulation studies, and that our knowledge about known TF targets has a strong literature bias. We argue that TFs serve as a perfect bridge between the fields of gene regulation and signaling, and that separating these fields hinders our understanding of cell functions. Multi-omics approaches that measure multiple dimensions of TF activity are ideally suited to study the interplay of cell signaling and gene regulation using TFs as the anchor to link the two fields.

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