Synthesis and Characterization of Specific Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors for Mammalian LINE-1 Retrotransposons
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Bañuelos Sánchez, Guillermo; Rodríguez Heras, Sara; Franco Montalbán, Francisco; Tamayo Torres, Juan Antonio; García Pérez, José LuisEditorial
Elsevier
Fecha
2019Referencia bibliográfica
Banuelos-Sanchez G, Sanchez L, Benitez-Guijarro M, Sanchez-Carnerero V, Salvador-Palomeque C, Tristan-Ramos P, Benkaddour-Boumzaouad M, Morell S, Garcia-Puche JL, Heras SR, Franco-Montalban F, Tamayo JA, Garcia-Perez JL. Synthesis and Characterization of Specific Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors for Mammalian LINE-1 Retrotransposons. Cell Chem Biol. 2019 Aug 15;26(8):1095-1109.e14. doi: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2019.04.010. Epub 2019 May 30. PMID: 31155508.
Patrocinador
G.B.-S. is funded by a ‘‘Garantı´a Juvenil’’ contract from the European Social Fund in collaboration with the Andalusian Regional Government. M.B.-G. is funded by a ‘‘Formacion Profesorado Universitario’’ (FPU) PhD fellowship from the Government of Spain (MINECO, Ref FPU15/03294). In J.L.G.-Perez’s lab, this study has been funded by an International Early Career Scientist grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (IECS-55007420) and by a private donation from Ms Francisca Serrano (Trading y Bolsa para Torpes, Granada, Spain). J.L.G.Perez’s lab is also supported by the European Research Council (ERC-Consolidator ERC-STG-2012-309433), and by MINECO-FEDER (SAF2017-89745-R).Resumen
Retrotransposons are a type of transposable element
(TE) that have amplified to astonishing numbers in
mammalian genomes, comprising more than a third
of the human and mouse genomes. Long interspersed
element class 1 (LINE-1 or L1) retrotransposons
are abundant and currently active retroelements
in the human and mouse genomes. Similarly, long
terminal repeat (LTR)-containing retrotransposons
are abundant in both genomes, although only active
in mice. LTR- and LINE-1-retroelements use different
mechanisms for retrotransposition, although both
involve the reverse transcription of an intermediate
retroelement-derived RNA. Retrotransposon activity
continues to effect the germline and somatic genomes,
generating interindividual variability over
evolution and potentially influencing cancer and brain
physiology, respectively. However, relatively little is
known about the functional consequences of retrotransposition.
In this study, we have synthesized
and characterized reverse transcriptase inhibitors
specific for mammalian LINE-1 retrotransposons,
which might help deciphering the functional impact
of retrotransposition in vivo.