Aberrant RNA splicing in cancer Review


Authors: Escobar-Hoyos, L.; Knorr, K.; Abdel-Wahab, O.
Review Title: Aberrant RNA splicing in cancer
Title Series: Annual Review of Cancer Biology-Series
Abstract: RNA splicing, the enzymatic process of removing segments of premature RNA to produce mature RNA, is a key mediator of proteome diversity and regulator of gene expression. Increased systematic sequencing of the genome and transcriptome of cancers has identified a variety of means by which RNA splicing is altered in cancer relative to normal cells. These findings, in combination with the discovery of recurrent change-of-function mutations in splicing factors in a variety of cancers, suggest that alterations in splicing are drivers of tumorigenesis. Greater characterization of altered splicing in cancer parallels increasing efforts to pharmacologically perturb splicing and early-phase clinical development of small molecules that disrupt splicing in patients with cancer. Here we review recent studies of global changes in splicing in cancer, splicing regulation of mitogenic pathways critical in cancer transformation, and efforts to therapeutically target splicing in cancer.
Keywords: rna; spliceosome; splicing; growth-factor receptor; functional; phase-i; pyruvate-kinase; consequences; driver mutations; sf3b1; srsf2; u2af1; recurrent mutations; sf3b1 mutations; factor caper-alpha; zrsr2; factor srsf6
Journal Title: Annual Review of Cancer Biology
Volume: 3
ISSN: 2472-3428
Publisher: Annual Reviews  
Date Published: 2019-01-01
Start Page: 167
End Page: 185
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000462707500009
PROVIDER: wos
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-cancerbio-030617-050407
PMCID: PMC7453310
PUBMED: 32864546
Notes: Article; Book Chapter -- 4139 EL CAMINO WAY, PO BOX 10139, PALO ALTO, CA 94303-0897 USA -- Source: Wos
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