Julia Winter
German Cancer Research Center
13 Papers
75 Citations
Julia Winter is an academic researcher from German Cancer Research Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Argonaute & microRNA. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 10 publications. Previous affiliations of Julia Winter include Heidelberg University & University of Münster.
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Papers
Many roads to maturity: microRNA biogenesis pathways and their regulation
TL;DR: Recent advances in knowledge of the microRNA biosynthesis pathways are reviewed and their impact on post-transcriptional microRNA regulation during tumour development is discussed.
Argonaute proteins regulate microRNA stability: Increased microRNA abundance by Argonaute proteins is due to microRNA stabilization
Julia Winter,Sven Diederichs +1 more
TL;DR: Two model systems are employed to identify factors altering miRNA stability and evidence how Argonaute proteins post-transcriptionally elevate mature miRNA levels via increasing mi RNA stability is provided.
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MicroRNA Biogenesis and Cancer
Julia Winter,Sven Diederichs +1 more
TL;DR: The microRNA-processing pathway as well as recent insights into posttranscriptional regulation of microRNA expression are reviewed, highlighting its significance for tumor diseases.
144
Loop-miRs: active microRNAs generated from single-stranded loop regions
Julia Winter,Steffen Link,Dominik Witzigmann,Catherina Hildenbrand,Christopher Previti,Sven Diederichs +5 more
TL;DR: Evidence is provided that precursor-miRNAs can give rise to three distinct endogenous miRNAs: the guide strand, the passenger strand and the loop-miR, which are first evidence that endogenous, unmodified, single-stranded RNA sequences are generated from single-Stranded loop regions of human pre-miRNA hairpins.
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Argonaute-3 activates the let-7a passenger strand microRNA.
Julia Winter,Sven Diederichs +1 more
TL;DR: This study uncovers the first protein regulator of the ratio between microRNA guide and passenger strand expression and activity, independent of the 5′-terminal basepair stability, challenging the universality of the respective rule for microRNA strand selection.
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