High-Throughput Analysis of Noncoding RNAs: Implications in Clinical Epigenetics, published in the Book "Epigenetic Biomarkers and Diagnostics", 1st Edition
Chapter
Publication Date:
2015
abstract:
The evidence that protein-coding genes represent less than 2% of all human genome, and that more than 90% of it is actively transcribed, changed the shared view that RNA is a bridge between DNA sequences and proteins. The introduction of RNA-Sequencing technology and the parallel expansion of computational biology revealed that thousands of sites produce non-coding transcripts. These molecules, collectively known as non-coding RNAs are key players in transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation and in chromatin organization. Their altered expression is increasingly associated with pathological conditions.
This chapter provides an overview about innovative high-throughput sequencing technologies and computational pipelines to profile non-coding RNAs, focusing on those with a proven epigenetic role. We examine the intriguing network between epigenome and ncRNAs and how these interactions are disrupted in human disease, thereby representing new potential clinical biomarkers.
Iris type:
02.01 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
Keywords:
Next-generation Sequencing; RNA-Sequencing; non-coding RNAs; epigenetics; human disease; cancer; chromatin; miRNAs; lncRNAs
List of contributors: