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Nanos genes and their role in development and beyond
De Keuckelaere, E.; Hulpiau, P.; Saeys, Y.; Berx, G.; van Roy, F. (2018). Nanos genes and their role in development and beyond. Cellular and molecular life sciences 75(11): 1929-1946. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00018-018-2766-3
In: Cellular and molecular life sciences. ISSN 1420-682X; e-ISSN 1420-9071, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Author keywords
    Nanos; Pumilio; Germ cell specification; Cancer; Phylogeny; RNA-bindingprotein; RNA regulation; Multiprotein complexes; Cancer testis antigen;pRb deficiency

Authors  Top 
  • De Keuckelaere, E., more
  • Hulpiau, P., more
  • Saeys, Y., more

Abstract
    The hallmark of Nanos proteins is their typical (CCHC)2 zinc finger motif (zf-nanos). Animals have one to four nanos genes. For example, the fruit fly and demosponge have only one nanos gene, zebrafish and humans have three, and Fugu rubripes has four. Nanos genes are mainly known for their evolutionarily preserved role in germ cell survival and pluripotency. Nanos proteins have been reported to bind the C-terminal RNA-binding domain of Pumilio to form a post-transcriptional repressor complex. Several observations point to a link between the miRNA-mediated repression complex and the Nanos/Pumilio complex. Repression of the E2F3 oncogene product is, indeed, mediated by cooperation between the Nanos/Pumilio complex and miRNAs. Another important interaction partner of Nanos is the CCR4–NOT deadenylase complex. Besides the tissue-specific contribution of Nanos proteins to normal development, their ectopic expression has been observed in several cancer cell lines and various human cancers. An inverse correlation between the expression levels of human Nanos1 and Nanos3 and E-cadherin was observed in several cancer cell lines. Loss of E-cadherin, an important cell–cell adhesion protein, contributes to tumor invasion and metastasis. Overexpression of Nanos3 induces epithelial–mesenchymal transition in lung cancer cell lines partly by repressing E-cadherin. Other than some most interesting data from Nanos knockout mice, little is known about mammalian Nanos proteins, and further research is needed. In this review, we summarize the main roles of Nanos proteins and discuss the emerging concept of Nanos proteins as oncofetal antigens.

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