The roles of ribosomal proteins in nasopharyngeal cancer: Culprits, sentinels or both

Ribosomal protein genes encode products that are essential for cellular protein biosynthesis and are major components of ribosomes. Canonically, they are involved in the complex system of ribosome biogenesis pivotal to the catalysis of protein translation. Amid this tightly organised process, some r...

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Main Authors: Sim, Edmund Ui-Hang, Lee, Choon Weng, Narayanan, Kumaran
Format: Article
Published: BMC 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/27205/
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spelling my.um.eprints.272052022-05-31T07:25:33Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/27205/ The roles of ribosomal proteins in nasopharyngeal cancer: Culprits, sentinels or both Sim, Edmund Ui-Hang Lee, Choon Weng Narayanan, Kumaran RC0254 Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer) Ribosomal protein genes encode products that are essential for cellular protein biosynthesis and are major components of ribosomes. Canonically, they are involved in the complex system of ribosome biogenesis pivotal to the catalysis of protein translation. Amid this tightly organised process, some ribosomal proteins have unique spatial and temporal physiological activity giving rise to their extra-ribosomal functions. Many of these extra-ribosomal roles pertain to cellular growth and differentiation, thus implicating the involvement of some ribosomal proteins in organogenesis. Consequently, dysregulated functions of these ribosomal proteins could be linked to oncogenesis or neoplastic transformation of human cells. Their suspected roles in carcinogenesis have been reported but not specifically explained for malignancy of the nasopharynx. This is despite the fact that literature since one and half decade ago have documented the association of ribosomal proteins to nasopharyngeal cancer. In this review, we explain the association and contribution of dysregulated expression among a subset of ribosomal proteins to nasopharyngeal oncogenesis. The relationship of these ribosomal proteins with the cancer are explained. We provide information to indicate that the dysfunctional extra-ribosomal activities of specific ribosomal proteins are tightly involved with the molecular pathogenesis of nasopharyngeal cancer albeit mechanisms yet to be precisely defined. The complete knowledge of this will impact future applications in the effective management of nasopharyngeal cancer. BMC 2021-06-30 Article PeerReviewed Sim, Edmund Ui-Hang and Lee, Choon Weng and Narayanan, Kumaran (2021) The roles of ribosomal proteins in nasopharyngeal cancer: Culprits, sentinels or both. Biomarker Research, 9 (1). ISSN 2050-7771, DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s40364-021-00311-x <https://doi.org/10.1186/s40364-021-00311-x>. 10.1186/s40364-021-00311-x
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic RC0254 Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer)
spellingShingle RC0254 Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer)
Sim, Edmund Ui-Hang
Lee, Choon Weng
Narayanan, Kumaran
The roles of ribosomal proteins in nasopharyngeal cancer: Culprits, sentinels or both
description Ribosomal protein genes encode products that are essential for cellular protein biosynthesis and are major components of ribosomes. Canonically, they are involved in the complex system of ribosome biogenesis pivotal to the catalysis of protein translation. Amid this tightly organised process, some ribosomal proteins have unique spatial and temporal physiological activity giving rise to their extra-ribosomal functions. Many of these extra-ribosomal roles pertain to cellular growth and differentiation, thus implicating the involvement of some ribosomal proteins in organogenesis. Consequently, dysregulated functions of these ribosomal proteins could be linked to oncogenesis or neoplastic transformation of human cells. Their suspected roles in carcinogenesis have been reported but not specifically explained for malignancy of the nasopharynx. This is despite the fact that literature since one and half decade ago have documented the association of ribosomal proteins to nasopharyngeal cancer. In this review, we explain the association and contribution of dysregulated expression among a subset of ribosomal proteins to nasopharyngeal oncogenesis. The relationship of these ribosomal proteins with the cancer are explained. We provide information to indicate that the dysfunctional extra-ribosomal activities of specific ribosomal proteins are tightly involved with the molecular pathogenesis of nasopharyngeal cancer albeit mechanisms yet to be precisely defined. The complete knowledge of this will impact future applications in the effective management of nasopharyngeal cancer.
format Article
author Sim, Edmund Ui-Hang
Lee, Choon Weng
Narayanan, Kumaran
author_facet Sim, Edmund Ui-Hang
Lee, Choon Weng
Narayanan, Kumaran
author_sort Sim, Edmund Ui-Hang
title The roles of ribosomal proteins in nasopharyngeal cancer: Culprits, sentinels or both
title_short The roles of ribosomal proteins in nasopharyngeal cancer: Culprits, sentinels or both
title_full The roles of ribosomal proteins in nasopharyngeal cancer: Culprits, sentinels or both
title_fullStr The roles of ribosomal proteins in nasopharyngeal cancer: Culprits, sentinels or both
title_full_unstemmed The roles of ribosomal proteins in nasopharyngeal cancer: Culprits, sentinels or both
title_sort roles of ribosomal proteins in nasopharyngeal cancer: culprits, sentinels or both
publisher BMC
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/27205/
_version_ 1735409512722989056