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MRNA Transcript Variants Expressed in Mammalian Cells

Overview
Journal Int J Mol Sci
Publisher MDPI
Date 2025 Feb 13
PMID 39940824
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Abstract

Gene expression or gene regulation studies often assume one gene expresses one mRNA. However, contrary to the conventional idea, a single gene in mammalian cells can express multiple transcript variants translated into several different proteins. The transcript variants are generated through transcription from alternative start sites and alternative post-transcriptional processing of the precursor mRNA (pre-mRNA). In addition, gene mutations and RNA editing further enhance the diversity of the transcript variants. The transcript variants can encode proteins with various domains, expanding the functional repertoire of a single gene. Some transcript variants may not encode proteins but function as non-coding RNAs and regulate gene expression. The expression level of the transcript variants may vary between cell types or within the same cells under different biological conditions. Transcript variants are characteristic of cell differentiation in a particular tissue, and the variants may play a key role in normal development and aging. Studies also reported that some transcript variants may have roles in disease pathogenesis. The biological significances urge studying the complexity of gene expression at the transcript level. This article updates the molecular basis of transcript variants in mammalian cells, including the formation mechanisms and potential roles in host biology. Gaining insight into the transcript variants will not only identify novel mechanisms of gene regulation but also unravel the role of the variants in health and disease.

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