학술논문

Molecular mechanisms behind mRNA localization in axons
Document Type
article
Source
Open Biology, Vol 10, Iss 9 (2020)
Subject
mrna trafficking
rna-binding proteins
axon
neuron
local translation
Biology (General)
QH301-705.5
Language
English
ISSN
2046-2441
Abstract
Messenger RNA (mRNA) localization allows spatiotemporal regulation of the proteome at the subcellular level. This is observed in the axons of neurons, where mRNA localization is involved in regulating neuronal development and function by orchestrating rapid adaptive responses to extracellular cues and the maintenance of axonal homeostasis through local translation. Here, we provide an overview of the key findings that have broadened our knowledge regarding how specific mRNAs are trafficked and localize to axons. In particular, we review transcriptomic studies investigating mRNA content in axons and the molecular principles underpinning how these mRNAs arrived there, including cis-acting mRNA sequences and trans-acting proteins playing a role. Further, we discuss evidence that links defective axonal mRNA localization and pathological outcomes.