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Id proteins

ID proteins

In eukaryotic organisms, ID proteins are key regulators of development when they function to preserve the stem cell state and prevent lineage determination.

By fueling several key features of tumor progression (deregulated proliferation, invasiveness, angiogenesis and metastasis), ID proteins contribute to multiple steps of tumorigenesis.

Through oncogenic processes that lead to their aberrant activation in tumors, ID proteins transfer the phenotypic traits of embryonic stem cells to cancer cells.

ID proteins have recently emerged as highly specialized factors in post-mitotic neurons. The elevated expression of ID proteins arrests neurons in the axon growth mode and prevents cessation of axonal elongation.

References

- Iavarone A, Lasorella A. ID proteins as targets in cancer and tools in neurobiology. Trends Mol Med. 2006 Dec;12(12):588-94. PMID: 17071138

- Ruzinova MB, Benezra R. Id proteins in development, cell cycle and cancer. Trends Cell Biol. 2003 Aug;13(8):410-8. PMID: 12888293