To Code or Not to Code…Is that the Question?December 10, 2008In the past few years, ncRNAs have progressed from interesting anomalies to what some researchers think constitute the majority of the mammalian transcriptome. However, as reviewed by John Mattick and coworkers at the University of Queensland and the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research (both in Australia), it’s increasingly difficult to distinguish coding from noncoding RNAs […]
Let It SnoDecember 2, 2008It’s December, the time of year when much of the States is blanketed in a frosty mantle of the white stuff. But as recently reported in Molecular Cell, the ACA45 RNA appears to have pulled the ultimate snow job. Nikolaus Rajewsky, Gunter Meister, and colleagues revealed that ACA45, which was previously thought to function exclusively […]
miRNA Fights Cancer-Promoting Histone MethyltransferaseNovember 23, 2008What makes some tumors as gentle as purring kittens and others of the same cancer type as ferocious as saber-toothed tigers? A miRNA (miR-101) was recently shown to take a bite out of cancer by inhibiting the EZH2 histone methyltransferase. The study by Arul Chinnaiyan and co-workers at the University of Michigan Medical School, the […]
ncRNAs on the BrainNovember 17, 2008Do you remember the name of your fourth-grade teacher? How about what you had for lunch last Thursday? Highschool Prom date? Yeah, we went stag too, but if you’re having a hard time remebering key events, ncRNAs may be to blame! The human brain expresses high numbers of ncRNAs, and mounting evidence indicates important contributions […]
Chromatin Context Tip(60)s the Transcriptional Balance in ESCsNovember 12, 2008Unfortunately, the KISS principle (‘keep it simple, stupid’) doesn’t apply to chromatin. Although we’d like to think that certain histone modifications are always “good” for gene transcription and others are invariably “bad,” Barbara Panning and co-workers at the University of California San Francisco have found that in embryonic stem cells (ESCs), the transcriptional outcome of […]