mir-101 microRNA precursor family | |
---|---|
Identifiers | |
Symbol | mir-101 |
Rfam | RF00253 |
miRBase | MI0000103 |
miRBase family | MIPF0000046 |
Other data | |
RNA type | Gene; miRNA |
Domain(s) | Eukaryota |
GO | GO:0035195 GO:0035068 |
SO | SO:0001244 |
PDB structures | PDBe |
miR-101 microRNA precursor is a small non-coding RNA that regulates gene expression. Expression of miR-101 has been validated in both human (MI0000103, MI0000739)[1] and mouse (MI0000148).[2] This microRNA appears to be specific to the vertebrates and has now been predicted or confirmed in a wide range of vertebrate species (MIPF0000046). The precursor microRNA is a stem-loop structure of about 70 nucleotides in length that is processed by the Dicer enzyme to form the 21-24 nucleotide mature microRNA. In this case the mature sequence is excised from the 3' arm of the hairpin.
Survival analysis shows that hsa-miR-101 is associated with survival in multiple breast cancer datasets.[3]
References
- ^ Mourelatos Z, Dostie J, Paushkin S, Sharma A, Charroux B, Abel L, Rappsilber J, Mann M, Dreyfuss G (March 2002). "miRNPs: a novel class of ribonucleoproteins containing numerous microRNAs". Genes & Development. 16 (6): 720–8. doi:10.1101/gad.974702. PMC 155365. PMID 11914277.
- ^ Lagos-Quintana M, Rauhut R, Yalcin A, Meyer J, Lendeckel W, Tuschl T (April 2002). "Identification of tissue-specific microRNAs from mouse". Current Biology. 12 (9): 735–9. doi:10.1016/S0960-9822(02)00809-6. hdl:11858/00-001M-0000-0010-94EF-7. PMID 12007417. S2CID 7901788.
- ^ Lánczky A, Nagy Á, Bottai G, Munkácsy G, Szabó A, Santarpia L, Győrffy B (December 2016). "miRpower: a web-tool to validate survival-associated miRNAs utilizing expression data from 2178 breast cancer patients". Breast Cancer Research and Treatment. 160 (3): 439–446. doi:10.1007/s10549-016-4013-7. PMID 27744485. S2CID 11165696.
Further reading
- He XP, Shao Y, Li XL, Xu W, Chen GS, Sun HH, Xu HC, Xu X, Tang D, Zheng XF, Xue YP, Huang GC, Sun WH (November 2012). "Downregulation of miR-101 in gastric cancer correlates with cyclooxygenase-2 overexpression and tumor growth". The FEBS Journal. 279 (22): 4201–12. doi:10.1111/febs.12013. PMID 23013439. S2CID 205132426.