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Non-coding RNAs are involved in tumor cell death and affect tumorigenesis, progression, and treatment: a systematic review.

Authors :
Zeping Han
Wenfeng Luo
Jian Shen
Fangmei Xie
Jinggen Luo
Xiang Yang
Ting Pang
Yubing Lv
Yuguang Li
Xingkui Tang
Jinhua He
Source :
Frontiers in Cell & Developmental Biology; 2024, p1-15, 15p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Cell death is ubiquitous during development and throughout life and is a genetically determined active and ordered process that plays a crucial role in regulating homeostasis. Cell death includes regulated cell death and nonprogrammed cell death, and the common types of regulatory cell death are necrosis, apoptosis, necroptosis, autophagy, ferroptosis, and pyroptosis. Apoptosis, Necrosis and necroptosis are more common than autophagy, ferroptosis and pyroptosis among cell death. Non-coding RNAs are regulatory RNA molecules that do not encode proteins and include mainly microRNAs, long non-coding RNAs, and circular RNAs. Non-coding RNAs can act as oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes, with significant effects on tumor occurrence and development, and they can also regulate tumor cell autophagy, ferroptosis, and pyroptosis at the transcriptional or post-transcriptional level. This paper reviews the recent research progress on the effects of the non-coding RNAs involved in autophagy, ferroptosis, and pyroptosis on tumorigenesis, tumor development, and treatment, and looks forward to the future direction of this field, which will help to elucidate the molecular mechanisms of tumorigenesis and tumor development, as well as provide a new vision for the treatment of tumors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2296634X
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Frontiers in Cell & Developmental Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176030275
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2024.1284934