1-Hydroxy-xanthine Inhibitors of Caf1 Deadenylase as a Potential Treatment for OsteoporosisTools Ziemann, Max (2019) 1-Hydroxy-xanthine Inhibitors of Caf1 Deadenylase as a Potential Treatment for Osteoporosis. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
AbstractCaf1 is a subunit of the CCR4-NOT complex. The role of Caf1 is that of a magnesium dependent deadenylase enzyme, which removes the poly(A) tail of mRNA (deadenylation). The degradation of the poly(A) tail has a downstream effect on mRNA translation and subsequent protein synthesis. Caf1 is implicated in several biological processes, an important one of which being the inhibition of osteoblasts. Osteoblasts are cells responsible for the formation of bone tissue and their inhibition leads to negative regulation of bone mass. Inhibition of Caf1 has been proposed as a potential pharmacological method of increasing osteoblast activity. This may serve as a novel approach to increasing bone density as a treatment for brittle bone diseases such as osteoporosis.
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