Post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression in innate immunity
Carpenter, Susan ; Ricci, Emiliano P. ; Mercier, Blandine C. ; Moore, Melissa J. ; Fitzgerald, Katherine A
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Keywords
Alternative Splicing
Animals
Dendritic Cells
Gene Expression Regulation
Humans
Immunity, Innate
Inflammation
Mice
Polyadenylation
Protein Biosynthesis
RNA Processing, Post-Transcriptional
RNA Stability
RNA, Messenger
RNA, Untranslated
Signal Transduction
Toll-Like Receptors
Genetics
Immunity
Immunology and Infectious Disease
Immunology of Infectious Disease
Infectious Disease
Molecular Genetics
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Abstract
Innate immune responses combat infectious microorganisms by inducing inflammatory responses, antimicrobial pathways and adaptive immunity. Multiple genes within each of these functional categories are coordinately and temporally regulated in response to distinct external stimuli. The substantial potential of these responses to drive pathological inflammation and tissue damage highlights the need for rigorous control of these responses. Although transcriptional control of inflammatory gene expression has been studied extensively, the importance of post-transcriptional regulation of these processes is less well defined. In this Review, we discuss the regulatory mechanisms that occur at the level of mRNA splicing, mRNA polyadenylation, mRNA stability and protein translation, and that have instrumental roles in controlling both the magnitude and duration of the inflammatory response.
Source
Nat Rev Immunol. 2014 Jun;14(6):361-76. doi: 10.1038/nri3682. Link to article on publisher's site