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Useful 'junk':: Alu RNAs in the human transcriptome

Journal

CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR LIFE SCIENCES
Volume 64, Issue 14, Pages 1793-1800

Publisher

SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00018-007-7084-0

Keywords

Alu elements; Alu RNA; Alu RNP; alternative splicing; A-to-I editing; translation regulation; miRNAs; UTR; gene expression

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Alu elements are the most abundant repetitive elements in the human genome; they have amplified by retrotransposition to reach the present number of more than one million copies. Alu elements can be transcribed in two different ways, by two independent polymerases. 'Free Alu RNAs' are transcribed by Pol III from their own promoter, while 'embedded Alu RNAs' are transcribed by Pol II as part of protein- and non-protein-coding RNAs. Recent studies have demonstrated that both free and embedded Alu RNAs play a major role in post transcriptional regulation of gene expression, for example by affecting protein translation, alternative splicing and mRNA stability. These discoveries illustrate how a part of the 'junk DNA' content of the human genome has been recruited to important functions in regulation of gene expression.

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