4.7 Review

Functional Role of AKNA: A Scoping Review

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom11111709

Keywords

AKNA; function; immune response; inflammation; autoimmunity; cancer

Funding

  1. Instituto Nacional de Salud Publica, Mexico
  2. Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia
  3. KTP (SEP Basic Science 2015 grant [258217]
  4. VMM [CATEDRAS-2014-C01-#245520]
  5. YR [A1-S-15601]
  6. Instituto Nacional de Cancerologia [018/037/IBI, CEI/1284/18]
  7. Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico [UNAM-PAPIIT, IN212519]

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AKNA modulates gene expression in immune cells, acts as a negative regulator of inflammation and plays a role in cancer, autoimmunity, and neurogenesis. The evidence supports AKNA's involvement in various cellular processes.
Human akna encodes an AT-hook transcription factor whose expression participates in various cellular processes. We conducted a scoping review on the literature regarding the functional role of AKNA according to the evidence found in human and in vivo and in vitro models, stringently following the PRISMA-ScR statement recommendations. Methods: We undertook an independent PubMed literature search using the following search terms, AKNA OR AKNA ADJ gene OR AKNA protein, human OR AKNA ADJ functions. Observational and experimental articles were considered. The selected studies were categorized using a pre-determined data extraction form. A narrative summary of the evidence was produced. Results: AKNA modulates the expression of CD40 and CD40L genes in immune system cells. It is a negative regulator of inflammatory processes as evidenced by knockout mouse models and observational studies for several autoimmune and inflammatory diseases. Furthermore, AKNA contributes to the de-regulation of the immune system in cancer, and it has been proposed as a susceptibility genetic factor and biomarker in CC, GC, and HNSCC. Finally, AKNA regulates neurogenesis by destabilizing the microtubules dynamics. Conclusion: Our results provide evidence for the role of AKNA in various cellular processes, including immune response, inflammation, development, cancer, autoimmunity, and neurogenesis.

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