“…Since Y-box binding proteins exhibit a high degree of primary sequence conservation, particularly in the central DNA binding domain, it has been suggested that they may have essential structural and functional roles in eukaryotic cells. In fact, a growing body of experimental evidence indicates that Y-box binding proteins are involved in a wide variety of biological functions, including regulation of gene expression at both the transcriptional (2,10,13,25,26,32,37,38) and translational (48) levels, DNA and RNA condensation, and DNA repair (21,52,53). In addition, recent reports indicate that the members of the Y-box family of proteins are responsive to many types of stress-related stimuli, including UV irradiation (8,28), drug treatment (3,32), DNA damage (24,28), and interleukin-2 treatment in T cells (45).…”