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Degradation of transcripts in human nuclei is primarily facilitated by the RNA exosome. To obtain substrate specificity, the exosome is aided by adaptors; in the nucleoplasm, those adaptors are the nuclear exosome-targeting (NEXT) complex and the poly(A) (pA) exosome-targeting (PAXT) connection. How these adaptors guide exosome targeting remains enigmatic. Employing high-resolution 3' end sequencing, we demonstrate that NEXT substrates arise from heterogenous and predominantly pA 3' ends often covering kilobase-wide genomic regions. In contrast, PAXT targets harbor well-defined pA 3' ends defined by canonical pA site use. Irrespective of this clear division, NEXT and PAXT act redundantly in two ways: (1) regional redundancy, where the majority of exosome-targeted transcription units produce NEXT- and PAXT-sensitive RNA isoforms, and (2) isoform redundancy, where the PAXT connection ensures fail-safe decay of post-transcriptionally polyadenylated NEXT targets. In conjunction, this provides a two-layered targeting mechanism for efficient nuclear sorting of the human transcriptome.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2020.01.068 | DOI Listing |
iScience
August 2025
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of North Texas, Denton, TX, USA.
To meet the emerging demand for constraining engineered probiotic activities, many biocontainment studies explore strategies that involve killing engineered microbes, which often create basal levels of cytotoxicity that hamper cell fitness and performance. Here, we explored a circuit design that destroys the engineered genetic materials in a probiotic strain, instead of killing these cells, under non-permissive conditions. Our safeguard circuit involves a two-layered transcriptional regulatory circuit to control the expression of a CRISPR system that targets the engineered genes for degradation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Biol Macromol
June 2025
Department of Biology, Shahid Chamran University of Ahvaz, Ahvaz, Iran.
A novel magnetic-responsive two-layered nanocarrier based on chitosan was developed to enhance therapeutic efficiency and controlled release of Cephalexin. This smart, biocompatible, and biodegradable system utilizes magnetic forces to precisely direct and regulate the release of drugs, ensuring targeted delivery while minimizing systemic side effects. The mesoporous silica interlayer enhances drug loading capacity, mechanical stability, and diffusion-controlled release.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBlood
March 2025
Institute of Molecular Immunology, School of Medicine and Health, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany.
Loss of anticancer natural killer (NK) cell function in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is associated with fatal disease progression and remains poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that AML blasts isolated from patients rapidly inhibit NK cell function and escape NK cell-mediated killing. Transcriptome analysis of NK cells exposed to AML blasts revealed increased CREM expression and transcriptional activity, indicating enhanced cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) signaling, confirmed by uniform production of the cAMP-inducing prostanoid prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) by all AML-blast isolates from patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecules
September 2024
Department of Materials Chemistry, Huzhou University, Huzhou 313000, China.
Nanoscale Adv
May 2024
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Ioannina 45110 Ioannina Greece
Targeting cancer cells without affecting normal cells poses a particular challenge. Nevertheless, the utilization of innovative nanomaterials in targeted cancer therapy has witnessed significant growth in recent years. In this study, we examined two layered carbon nanomaterials, graphene and carbon nanodiscs (CNDs), both of which possess extraordinary physicochemical and structural properties alongside their nano-scale dimensions, and explored their potential as nanocarriers for quercetin, a bioactive flavonoid known for its potent anticancer properties.
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