Âé¶¹ÒùÔº


Long non-coding RNAs reveal an unexpected way to regulate gene expression

Long non-coding RNAs reveal an unexpected way to regulate gene expression
The findings suggest that lncRNAs can dial up or down gene activity by influencing the network of regulating mechanisms in the cell. Credit: Cell Genomics (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.xgen.2025.100927

Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNA) are a type of RNA molecule that do not carry instructions to make proteins. Instead, they influence how other genes are expressed. There are tens of thousands of lncRNAs in the human body, many of which are active in specific tissues or diseases like cancer. However, figuring out exactly what they do has been a major challenge.

Led by Baylor College of Medicine first authors Drs. Hua-Sheng Chiu and Sonal Somvanshi, researchers at Baylor, Ghent University in Belgium, Tsinghua University in China and other collaborating institutions worked together to better understand how lncRNAs function. Their findings revealed that lncRNAs seem to regulate in a coordinated manner that had not been seen before.

Their study is the of this month's issue of Cell Genomics.

Long non-coding RNAs have been involved in many key cell processes, including cell and tissue development. They may bind DNA regions to regulate into RNA or regulate post-transcriptional events—the processing of these RNAs by altering their stability, degradation and translation into proteins.

"Despite their abundance and their association with specific diseases, only the functions of a few lncRNAs have been fully characterized," said lead corresponding author Dr. Pavel Sumazin, associate professor of pediatrics and member of the Jan and Dan Comprehensive Cancer Center at Baylor. He is also the director of the Bioinformatics Core Laboratory at Texas Children's Hospital. "However, these studies have often been unable to provide mechanistic insights into lncRNA function."

The team began by developing a powerful new computational tool called BigHorn that uses machine learning to predict where lncRNAs bind to DNA and which genes they regulate. Unlike older methods that rely on stringent sequence matching, BigHorn looks for more flexible "elastic" patterns in the DNA that better reflect how lncRNAs behave in living cells.

"We tested BigHorn on data from more than 27,000 samples, including many types of cancer," said Chiu, assistant professor of pediatrics—oncology at Baylor and Texas Children's Hospital. "We found that it significantly outperformed previous tools in predicting lncRNA–DNA interactions."

Interestingly, BigHorn accurately identified cases where a single lncRNA regulates a gene at both the transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels—a new phenomenon the researchers call coordinated regulation.

"These lncRNAs may act as that control the stability and translation of mRNAs they helped transcribe, leading to tightly coupled expression profiles," said Chiu.

To demonstrate how powerful this approach can be, the team focused on one lncRNA called ZFAS1. This molecule is often found in high levels in and was predicted by BigHorn to regulate many important genes.

"One of the key targets of ZFAS1 is DICER1, a cancer gene that plays a central role in producing microRNAs—tiny molecules that help fine-tune gene expression," Sumazin explained. "We found that ZFAS1 not only helps turn on the DICER1 gene but also protects its mRNA from being degraded. This dual action makes DICER1 tightly dependent on the expression of ZFAS1, which acts like a dial to regulate DICER1 levels, which in turn affect the entire network of microRNAs in the cell."

"While we focused on one interaction, our findings suggested that lncRNAs regulate genes across cancers to effectively regulate cancer programs," Sumazin added. "In every cancer cell type, hundreds of lncRNAs appear to control hundreds of genes in this dual fashion, creating tightly linked expression patterns that are especially important in diseases like cancer."

The BigHorn tool is , and the authors hope it will help scientists uncover the new roles of lncRNAs in everything from development to aging to cancer.

More information: Hua-Sheng Chiu et al, Coordinated regulation by lncRNAs results in tight lncRNA-target couplings, Cell Genomics (2025).

Journal information: Cell Genomics

Citation: Long non-coding RNAs reveal an unexpected way to regulate gene expression (2025, August 5) retrieved 6 August 2025 from /news/2025-08-coding-rnas-reveal-unexpected-gene.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Comprehensive review on the significant roles and regulatory mechanisms of lncRNAs in fruits and vegetables

0 shares

Feedback to editors