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Perspectives
Egad, More Forms of Gene Regulation: The gadd45a Story
Ashish Lal and Myriam Gorospe
volume 5 | issue 13
1 july 2006Pages: 1422 - 1425
This is an open-access article
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Despite the historical hegemony of transcription, mounting evidence supports the importance of posttranscriptional gene regulation via processes such as mRNA splicing, localization, turnover, and translation. However, each of these steps is still largely viewed as an exclusive proposition, whereby a particular gene under given circumstances is controlled by a single specific regulatory mechanism. Our recent investigation of gadd45a expression in response to genotoxic stress illustrates a more complex scenario, wherein transcriptional changes operate in concert with mRNA turnover and translational regulation. gadd45a thus joins a handful of reported genes which are specifically expressed in response to cellular damage or mitogenic cues through the coordinated action of DNA- and RNA-binding proteins. Eliciting cellular responses that are strong, swift, and versatile, gene regulation by multiple factors acting on different levels is emerging as the norm, rather than the exception, for a growing collection of gene products which critically influence cellular homeostasis.
This is an open-access article
If the document does not open, please right-click on the link (control-click on a Macintosh) and select the option to save the file to disk.




