Date published: 2025-9-13

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PAPD5 Inhibitors

PAPD5 inhibitors are a class of chemical compounds designed to target and inhibit the activity of PAP-associated domain-containing 5 (PAPD5), an enzyme involved in RNA processing and polyadenylation. PAPD5 is part of the non-canonical poly(A) polymerase family, which is responsible for adding short poly(A) tails to various RNA molecules, including non-coding RNAs, histone mRNAs, and mitochondrial transcripts. Unlike the canonical poly(A) polymerases that regulate mRNA stability and translation efficiency, PAPD5 plays a more specialized role in regulating RNA decay and quality control mechanisms. By inhibiting PAPD5, these compounds interfere with the enzyme's ability to regulate RNA stability, turnover, and degradation, thereby impacting the control of RNA lifecycles within the cell.

The inhibition of PAPD5 occurs by blocking its active site or altering its interaction with other components of the RNA processing machinery, thereby preventing it from adding poly(A) tails to specific RNA substrates. This disruption in RNA processing allows researchers to investigate the role of PAPD5 in maintaining cellular RNA homeostasis and its involvement in RNA surveillance pathways. PAPD5 inhibitors are valuable tools for studying how cells manage the balance between RNA synthesis and degradation, providing insights into the mechanisms that regulate the quality and turnover of RNA molecules. Through the selective inhibition of PAPD5, scientists can explore the complex interactions between RNA processing enzymes and their substrates, shedding light on the broader regulatory networks that control gene expression and RNA stability in both the cytoplasm and mitochondria.

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