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lariatdriven

Lariat-driven, sometimes written as lariat-driven or lariatdriven, is a term used in molecular biology to describe a mechanism of circular RNA biogenesis, also called lariat-driven circularization. In this model, exon-containing lariat intermediates formed during pre-mRNA splicing serve as substrates for generating circular RNAs (circRNAs). This mechanism contrasts with intron-pairing-driven circularization, which relies on base-pairing between complementary intronic sequences to promote back-splicing.

Mechanism: During splicing, introns are removed via lariat formation. In some transcripts, skipping of exons produces

Evidence and scope: Lariat-driven circularization is one of several models proposed for circRNA biogenesis. It has

Implications: Understanding lariat-driven circularization enhances knowledge of the regulatory potential of circRNAs, including roles in gene

See also: circular RNA, RNA splicing, lariat intron, back-splicing.

a
lariat
that
includes
exonic
sequences.
Following
intron
removal
and
debranching,
exon
junctions
can
undergo
back-splicing,
yielding
a
circRNA
composed
mainly
of
exons
derived
from
the
original
transcript.
The
lariat
stage
is
thus
considered
a
driving
intermediate
in
the
production
of
certain
circRNAs.
been
supported
by
observations
that
the
production
of
some
circRNAs
correlates
with
exon
skipping
and
with
the
presence
of
lariat-like
intermediates.
The
relative
contribution
of
this
route
appears
to
be
gene-
and
context-dependent,
and
not
all
circRNAs
are
explained
by
this
mechanism.
expression
regulation,
miRNA
sequestration,
and
potential
translation.
Experimental
manipulation
of
splicing
factors
or
debranching
enzymes
has
been
used
to
probe
its
involvement
in
specific
transcripts.