Mutually exclusive acetylation and ubiquitylation of the splicing factor SRSF5 control tumor growth

Changes in glucose metabolism can lead to tumor development, but the involvement of splicing factors is unclear. Here, the authors screened for SR proteins and identified SRSF5 stability is enhanced in response to glucose elevation to promote alternative splicing of CCAR1 which facilitates tumor gro...

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Autores principales: Yuhan Chen, Qingyang Huang, Wen Liu, Qiong Zhu, Chun-Ping Cui, Liang Xu, Xing Guo, Ping Wang, Jingwen Liu, Guanglong Dong, Wenyi Wei, Cui Hua Liu, Zhichun Feng, Fuchu He, Lingqiang Zhang
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Nature Portfolio 2018
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/400fb7c1b7a24274a07f85d7e3997f10
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Sumario:Changes in glucose metabolism can lead to tumor development, but the involvement of splicing factors is unclear. Here, the authors screened for SR proteins and identified SRSF5 stability is enhanced in response to glucose elevation to promote alternative splicing of CCAR1 which facilitates tumor growth.