Alternative mRNA Splicing and Promising Therapies in Cancer

Cancer is among the leading causes of mortality worldwide. While considerable attention has been given to genetic and epigenetic sources of cancer-specific cellular activities, the role of alternative mRNA splicing has only recently received attention as a major contributor to cancer initiation and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Biomolecules
Main Author: James D. Fackenthal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2023-03-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2218-273X/13/3/561
_version_ 1850406082624618496
author James D. Fackenthal
author_facet James D. Fackenthal
author_sort James D. Fackenthal
collection DOAJ
container_title Biomolecules
description Cancer is among the leading causes of mortality worldwide. While considerable attention has been given to genetic and epigenetic sources of cancer-specific cellular activities, the role of alternative mRNA splicing has only recently received attention as a major contributor to cancer initiation and progression. The distribution of alternate mRNA splicing variants in cancer cells is different from their non-cancer counterparts, and cancer cells are more sensitive than non-cancer cells to drugs that target components of the splicing regulatory network. While many of the alternatively spliced mRNAs in cancer cells may represent “noise” from splicing dysregulation, certain recurring splicing variants have been shown to contribute to tumor progression. Some pathogenic splicing disruption events result from mutations in cis-acting splicing regulatory sequences in disease-associated genes, while others may result from shifts in balance among naturally occurring alternate splicing variants among mRNAs that participate in cell cycle progression and the regulation of apoptosis. This review provides examples of cancer-related alternate splicing events resulting from each step of mRNA processing and the promising therapies that may be used to address them.
format Article
id doaj-art-4bbb857e108f4bed891c9d643ddeded2
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 2218-273X
language English
publishDate 2023-03-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-4bbb857e108f4bed891c9d643ddeded22025-08-19T22:48:24ZengMDPI AGBiomolecules2218-273X2023-03-0113356110.3390/biom13030561Alternative mRNA Splicing and Promising Therapies in CancerJames D. Fackenthal0Department of Biological Sciences, College of Science and Health, Benedictine University, Lisle, IL 60532, USACancer is among the leading causes of mortality worldwide. While considerable attention has been given to genetic and epigenetic sources of cancer-specific cellular activities, the role of alternative mRNA splicing has only recently received attention as a major contributor to cancer initiation and progression. The distribution of alternate mRNA splicing variants in cancer cells is different from their non-cancer counterparts, and cancer cells are more sensitive than non-cancer cells to drugs that target components of the splicing regulatory network. While many of the alternatively spliced mRNAs in cancer cells may represent “noise” from splicing dysregulation, certain recurring splicing variants have been shown to contribute to tumor progression. Some pathogenic splicing disruption events result from mutations in cis-acting splicing regulatory sequences in disease-associated genes, while others may result from shifts in balance among naturally occurring alternate splicing variants among mRNAs that participate in cell cycle progression and the regulation of apoptosis. This review provides examples of cancer-related alternate splicing events resulting from each step of mRNA processing and the promising therapies that may be used to address them.https://www.mdpi.com/2218-273X/13/3/561alternative mRNA splicingcancertargeted therapies
spellingShingle James D. Fackenthal
Alternative mRNA Splicing and Promising Therapies in Cancer
alternative mRNA splicing
cancer
targeted therapies
title Alternative mRNA Splicing and Promising Therapies in Cancer
title_full Alternative mRNA Splicing and Promising Therapies in Cancer
title_fullStr Alternative mRNA Splicing and Promising Therapies in Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Alternative mRNA Splicing and Promising Therapies in Cancer
title_short Alternative mRNA Splicing and Promising Therapies in Cancer
title_sort alternative mrna splicing and promising therapies in cancer
topic alternative mRNA splicing
cancer
targeted therapies
url https://www.mdpi.com/2218-273X/13/3/561
work_keys_str_mv AT jamesdfackenthal alternativemrnasplicingandpromisingtherapiesincancer