4.7 Review

Small Nucleolar Derived RNAs as Regulators of Human Cancer

Journal

BIOMEDICINES
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10081819

Keywords

cancer; gene regulation; small nucleolar RNA (snoRNA); small nucleolar derived RNA (sdRNA); microRNA (miRNA); RNA; snoRNA; sdRNA; miRNA; genetics

Funding

  1. NSF RAPID grant [NSF2030080]
  2. NSF CAREER grant [1350064]
  3. NSF EPSCoR program
  4. USA COM IGP award 1828
  5. Alabama Commission on Higher Education ALEPSCoR [210471]
  6. National Science Foundation MRI [CNS-1726069]
  7. National Center for Advancing Translational Research of the National Institutes of Health [UL1TR001417]
  8. Division of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences

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In the past decade, sdRNAs derived from snoRNAs have emerged as important regulators in cancer gene expression. They possess miRNA-like functions and can act as oncogenic or tumor-suppressing RNAs depending on the tissue context. Despite being frequently overlooked in non-coding RNA analyses, sdRNAs represent a subclass of miRNAs that deserve further study to uncover their underlying biology and identify potential biomarkers and therapeutic targets for various human cancers.
In the past decade, RNA fragments derived from full-length small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) have been shown to be specifically excised and functional. These sno-derived RNAs (sdRNAs) have been implicated as gene regulators in a multitude of cancers, controlling a variety of genes post-transcriptionally via association with the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC). In this review, we have summarized the literature connecting sdRNAs to cancer gene regulation. SdRNAs possess miRNA-like functions and are able to fill the role of tumor-suppressing or tumor-promoting RNAs in a tissue context-dependent manner. Indeed, there are many miRNAs that are actually derived from snoRNA transcripts, meaning that they are truly sdRNAs and as such are included in this review. As sdRNAs are frequently discarded from ncRNA analyses, we emphasize that sdRNAs are functionally relevant gene regulators and likely represent an overlooked subclass of miRNAs. Based on the evidence provided by the papers reviewed here, we propose that sdRNAs deserve more extensive study to better understand their underlying biology and to identify previously overlooked biomarkers and therapeutic targets for a multitude of human cancers.

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