Trisha Shetty (Editor)

MIR361

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External IDs
  
GeneCards: MIR361

Human
  
Mouse

Ensembl
  
ENSG00000199051

Species
  
Human

Entrez
  
494323

Aliases
  
MIR361, MIRN361, hsa-mir-361, mir-361, microRNA 361

MicroRNA 361 is a micro RNA that in humans is encoded by the MIR361 gene.

Function

microRNAs (miRNAs) are short (20-24 nt) non-coding RNAs that are involved in post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression in multicellular organisms by affecting both the stability and translation of mRNAs. miRNAs are transcribed by RNA polymerase II as part of capped and polyadenylated primary transcripts (pri-miRNAs) that can be either protein-coding or non-coding. The primary transcript is cleaved by the Drosha ribonuclease III enzyme to produce an approximately 70-nt stem-loop precursor miRNA (pre-miRNA), which is further cleaved by the cytoplasmic Dicer ribonuclease to generate the mature miRNA and antisense miRNA star (miRNA*) products. The mature miRNA is incorporated into a RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC), which recognizes target mRNAs through imperfect base pairing with the miRNA and most commonly results in translational inhibition or destabilization of the target mRNA. The RefSeq represents the predicted microRNA stem-loop.

References

MIR361 Wikipedia