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Home - Cell Biology - Author Correction: The hunter becomes the hunted in target-directed microRNA degradation

Cell Biology

Author Correction: The hunter becomes the hunted in target-directed microRNA degradation

Last updated: February 28, 2026 11:01 pm
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Author Correction: The hunter becomes the hunted in target-directed microRNA degradation

A recent author correction has been issued for a key review article in Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology on target-directed microRNA degradation (TDMD). This regulatory mechanism, where a microRNA’s own target RNA can trigger the miRNA’s destruction, represents a sophisticated layer of post-transcriptional control. The original article detailed how this process fine-tunes gene expression networks, impacting cellular differentiation, metabolism, and stress responses. The correction ensures the accuracy of this critical resource for researchers studying RNA biology, epigenetics, and the complex signaling pathways that govern cell fate.

Why it might matter to you: For professionals focused on gene expression regulation and post-transcriptional control, this correction underscores the precision required in foundational literature. Understanding TDMD is crucial for interpreting experimental data in cancer biology, stem cell research, and developmental signaling, where miRNA misregulation is common. Accurate mechanistic reviews directly inform hypothesis generation and the design of targeted interventions in these areas.

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