Genes altered in major depressive disorder
Genes altered in major depressive disorder
Positive relationships between RBM8A and other components at different levels (count: 0)
Positive relationship network of RBM8A in MK4MDD
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Note:
1. The different color of the nodes denotes the level of the nodes.
Genetic/Epigenetic Locus
Protein and Other Molecule
Cell and Molecular Pathway
Neural System
Cognition and Behavior
Symptoms and Signs
Environment
MDD
2. Besides the component related relationships from literature, gene mapped protein and protein mapped gene are also shown in the network.
If the mapped gene or protein is not from literature, square node would be used instead of Circle node.
Accordingly, the relationship is marked with dot line.
2. User can drag the nodes to rearrange the layout of the network. Click the node will enter the report page of the node.
Right-click will show also the menus to link to the report page of the node and remove the node and related edges.
Hover the node will show the level of the node and hover the edge will show the evidence/description of the edge.
3. The network is generated using Cytoscape Web
Negative relationships between RBM8A and MDD (count: 0)
Negative relationships between RBM8A and other components at different levels (count: 0)
After transcription, eukaryotic mRNA precursors contain prot......
After transcription, eukaryotic mRNA precursors contain protein-coding exons and noncoding introns. In the following splicing, introns are excised and exons are joined by a macromolecular complex, the spliceosome. The standard spliceosome is made up of five small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs), U1, U2, U4, U5, and U6 snRNPs, and several spliceosome-associated proteins (SAPs). Spliceosomes are not a simple stable complex, but a dynamic family of particles that assemble on the mRNA precursor and help fold it into a conformation that allows transesterification to proceed. Various spliceosome forms (e.g. A-, B- and C-complexes) have been identified.More...
Gene Expression covers the process of transcription of mRNA ......
Gene Expression covers the process of transcription of mRNA genes, the processing of pre-mRNA, and its subsequent translation to result in a protein. The expression of non-protein-coding genes is not included in this section yet. However, the transcription of RNAs other than mRNA is described in the section on transcription; in the sections 'RNA Polymerase I Transcription', and 'RNA Polymerase III Transcription'.More...
Before a gene transcript is ready to be transported out of t......
Before a gene transcript is ready to be transported out of the nucleus, it has to undergo three major processing events to produce a fully translatable mRNA. These comprise capping, splicing out of introns from within the body of the pre-mRNA, and the generation of a 3' end, by cleavage, and except in the case of histone pre-mRNAs, polyadenylation. Although each of these reactions is a biochemically distinct process, these processes are interlinked and hence, influence one another's specificity and efficiency. On the other hand, most mRNA processing reactions occur co-transcriptionally. This is particularly important in very long genes where a strictly post-transcriptional processing would imply the existence of extremely long primary transcript molecules that would be susceptible to degradation. The co-transcriptional nature of pre-mRNA processing does not necessarily imply a functional coupling between the transcription and mRNA processing machineries. In some cases it may simply reflect that processing reactions occur during transcription because they are relatively fast compared with the time it takes to transcribe a gene to its end. In other cases a tight link exists between a particular processing reaction and the transcription process, due to the ability of the carboxy-terminal (CTD) of RNA polymerase II largest subunit to bind or recruit processing factors. The CTD consists of 52 heptad repeats (YSPTSPS). Specific phosphorylation/dephosphorylation patterns of serines 2 and 5 are critical for CTD function in coupling. CTD deletions that do not inactivate transcription significantly decrease the efficiency of capping, splicing and polyadenylation. The export of mRNA from the nucleus and mRNA splicing are also coupled. Mature mRNAs generated by splicing are more efficiently exported than their identical counterparts transcribed from a complementary DNA (cDNA). This effect of splicing on export is due to the recruitment of the mRNA export factor ALY to the mRNA during the splicing reaction, which in turn delivers the mRNP to the nuclear pore for export.More...
Transcription by RNA Polymerase I, RNA Polymerase III and tr......
Transcription by RNA Polymerase I, RNA Polymerase III and transcription from mitochondrial promoters.More...
transport of_mature_mrna_derived_from_an_intron_containing_transcript
Transport of mRNA from the nucleus to the cytoplasm, where i......
Transport of mRNA from the nucleus to the cytoplasm, where it is translated into protein, is highly selective and closely coupled to correct RNA processing. This coupling is achieved by the nuclear pore complex, which recognizes and transports only completed mRNAs.More...
Any covalent change in a primary (nascent) mRNA transcript i......
Any covalent change in a primary (nascent) mRNA transcript is mRNA Processing. For successful gene expression, the primary mRNA transcript needs to be converted to a mature mRNA prior to its translation into polypeptide. Eucaryotic mRNAs undergo a series of complex processing reactions; these begin on nascent transcripts as soon as a few ribonucleotides have been synthesized during transcription by RNA Polymerase II, through the export of the mature mRNA to the cytoplasm, and culminate with mRNA turnover in the cytoplasm.More...
The 3' ends of eukaryotic mRNAs are generated by posttranscr......
The 3' ends of eukaryotic mRNAs are generated by posttranscriptional processing of an extended primary transcript. For almost all RNAs, 3'-end processing consists of two steps: (i) the mRNA is first cleaved at a particular phosphodiester bond downstream of the coding sequence, (ii) the upstream fragment then receives a poly(A) tail of approximately 250 adenylate residues, whereas the downstream fragment is degraded. The two partial reactions are coupled so that reaction intermediates are usually undetectable. While 3' processing can be studied as an isolated event in vitro, it appears to be connected to transcription, splicing, and transcription termination in vivo. The only known exception to the rule of cleavage followed by polyadenylation are the major histone mRNAs, which are cleaved but not polyadenylated.More...
The process in which excision of introns from the primary tr......
The process in which excision of introns from the primary transcript of messenger RNA (mRNA) is followed by ligation of the two exon termini exposed by removal of each intron, is called mRNA splicing. Most of the mRNA is spliced by the major pathway, involving the U1, U2, U4, U5 and U6 snRNPs. A minor fraction, about 1 %, of the mRNAs are spliced via the U12 dependent pathway.More...