Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Stress induces tRNA cleavage by angiogenin in mammalian cells

588

Citations

17

References

2008

Year

Abstract

tRNAs play a central role in protein translation, acting as the carrier of amino acids. By cloning microRNAs, we unexpectedly obtained some tRNA fragments generated by tRNA cleavage in the anticodon loop. These tRNA fragments are present in many cell lines and different mouse tissues. In addition, various stress conditions can induce this tRNA cleavage event in mammalian cells. More importantly, angiogenin (ANG), a member of RNase A superfamily, appears to be the nuclease which cleaves tRNAs into tRNA halves in vitro and in vivo. These results imply that angiogenin plays an important physiological role in cell stress response, except for the known function of inducing angiogenesis.

References

YearCitations

2001

3.2K

2005

588

2005

564

2006

491

2000

286

2005

236

2005

199

1989

191

2005

189

1992

162

Page 1