EIF4E and cancer: Some of these mRNAs have been identified in cancer cells, immune cells and in DRG neurons (Furic et al., 2010, Aguilar-Valles et al., 2018, Amorim et al., 2018, Moy et al., 2018b), but the guiding principles for how p-eIF4E regulates the translation of specific subsets of mRNAs have still not been discovered (Scheper and Proud, 2002, Chen et al., 2023).