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[
Cell,
2004]
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are endogenous similar
to22 nt RNAs that can play important regulatory roles in animals and plants by targeting mRNAs; for cleavage or translational repression. Although they escaped notice until relatively recently, miRNAs comprise one of the more abundant classes of gene regulatory molecules in multicellular organisms and likely influence the output of many protein-coding genes.
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[
Annual Review of Microbiology,
1993]
In nematodes, many mRNAs contain a common 5' terminal 22-nt sequence. This sequence, the spliced leader (SL), is acquired from a small (approximately 100 nt) SL RNA via trans-splicing. Parallel in vitro and in vivo experiments have begun to clarify both the mechanism and biological role of trans-splicing. In vitro analysis (in cell free extracts) has shown that trans-splicing is remarkably similar to the snRNP mediated removal of intervening sequences from pre-mRNAs (cis-splicing). Additionally, this analysis has suggested a mechanism that may explain how the two substrates of trans-splicing (the SL RNA and pre-mRNA) efficiently associate with one another in the absence of sequence complementarity. In vivo experiments suggest that a major biological function of trans-splicing in nematodes may be to process polycistronic transcription units. Results obtained from the study of both parasitic and free-living species are discussed, and trans-splicing in nematodes is compared and contrasted to the analogous process in trypanosomatid protozoans.
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[
Methods Cell Biol,
2011]
Originally discovered in C. elegans, microRNAs (miRNAs) are small RNAs that regulate fundamental cellular processes in diverse organisms. MiRNAs are encoded within the genome and are initially transcribed as primary transcripts that can be several kilobases in length. Primary transcripts are successively cleaved by two RNase III enzymes, Drosha in the nucleus and Dicer in the cytoplasm, to produce 70 nucleotide (nt) long precursor miRNAs and 22 nt long mature miRNAs, respectively. Mature miRNAs regulate gene expression post-transcriptionally by imperfectly binding target mRNAs in association with the multiprotein RNA induced silencing complex (RISC). The conserved sequence, expression pattern, and function of some miRNAs across distinct species as well as the importance of specific miRNAs in many biological pathways have led to an explosion in the study of miRNA biogenesis, miRNA target identification, and miRNA target regulation. Many advances in our understanding of miRNA biology have come from studies in the powerful model organism C. elegans. This chapter reviews the current methods used in C. elegans to study miRNA biogenesis, small RNA populations, miRNA-protein complexes, and miRNA target regulation.
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[
WormBook,
2005]
About 70% of C. elegans mRNAs are trans-spliced to one of two 22 nucleotide spliced leaders. SL1 is used to trim off the 5'' ends of pre-mRNAs and replace them with the SL1 sequence. This processing event is very closely related to cis-splicing, or intron removal. The SL1 sequence is donated by a 100 nt small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particle (snRNP). This snRNP is structurally and functionally related to the U snRNAs (U1, U2, U4, U5 and U6) that play key roles in intron removal and trans-splicing, except that it is consumed in the process of splicing. More than half of C. elegans pre-mRNAs are subject to SL1 trans-splicing. About 30% are not trans-spliced at all. The remaining genes are trans-spliced by SL2. These genes are all downstream genes in closely spaced gene clusters similar to bacterial operons. They are transcribed from a promoter at the 5'' end of the cluster of between 2 and 8 genes. This transcription makes a polycistronic pre-mRNA that is co-transcriptionally processed by cleavage and polyadenylation at the 3'' end of each gene, and this event is closely coupled to the SL2 trans-splicing event that occurs only ~100 nt further downstream. Recent studies on the mechanism of SL2 trans-splicing have revealed that one of the 3'' end formation proteins, CstF, interacts with the only protein known to be specific to the SL2 snRNP. The operons contain primarily genes whose products are needed for mitochondrial function and the basic machinery of gene expression: transcription, splicing and translation. Many operons contain genes whose products are known to function together. This presumably provides co-regulation of these proteins by producing a single RNA that encodes both.
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[
RNA Biol,
2009]
SmY RNAs are a family of approximately 70-90 nt small nuclear RNAs found in nematodes. In C. elegans, SmY RNAs copurify in a small ribonucleoprotein (snRNP) complex related to the SL1 and SL2 snRNPs that are involved in nematode mRNA trans-splicing. Here we describe a comprehensive computational analysis of SmY RNA homologs found in the currently available genome sequences. We identify homologs in all sequenced nematode genomes in class Chromadorea. We are unable to identify homologs in a more distantly related nematode species, Trichinella spiralis (class: Dorylaimia), and in representatives of non-nematode phyla that use trans-splicing. Using comparative RNA sequence analysis, we infer a conserved consensus SmY RNA secondary structure consisting of two stems flanking a consensus Sm protein binding site. A representative seed alignment of the SmY RNA family, annotated with the inferred consensus secondary structure, has been deposited with the Rfam RNA families database.
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[
WormBook,
2012]
About 70% of C. elegans mRNAs are trans-spliced to one of two 22 nucleotide spliced leaders. SL1 is used to trim off the 5' ends of pre-mRNAs and replace them with the SL1 sequence. This processing event is very closely related to cis-splicing, or intron removal. The SL1 sequence is donated by a 100 nt small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particle (snRNP), the SL1 snRNP. This snRNP is structurally and functionally similar to the U snRNAs (U1, U2, U4, U5 and U6) that play key roles in intron removal and trans-splicing, except that the SL1 snRNP is consumed in the process. More than half of C. elegans pre-mRNAs are subject to SL1 trans-splicing, whereas ~30% are not trans-spliced. The remaining genes are trans-spliced by SL2, which is donated by a similar snRNP, the SL2 snRNP. SL2 recipients are all downstream genes in closely spaced gene clusters similar to bacterial operons. They are transcribed from a promoter at the 5' end of the cluster of between 2 and 8 genes. This transcription makes a polycistronic pre-mRNA that is co-transcriptionally processed by cleavage and polyadenylation at the 3' end of each gene, and this event is closely coupled to the SL2 trans-splicing event that occurs only ~100 nt further downstream. SL2 trans-splicing requires a sequence between the genes, the Ur element, that likely base pairs with the 5' splice site on the SL2 snRNP, in a manner analogous to the interaction between the 5' splice site in cis-splicing with the U1 snRNP. The key difference is that in trans-splicing, the snRNP contains the 5' splice site, whereas in cis-splicing the pre-mRNA does. Some operons, termed "hybrid operons", contain an additional promoter between two genes that can express the downstream gene or genes with a developmental profile that is different from that of the entire operon. The operons contain primarily genes required for rapid growth, including genes whose products are needed for mitochondrial function and the basic machinery of gene expression. Recent evidence suggests that RNA polymerase is poised at the promoters of growth genes, and operons allow more efficient recovery from growth-arrested states, resulting in reduction in the need for this cache of inactive RNA polymerase.
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[
Int J Mol Sci,
2021]
Alternative RNA splicing is an important regulatory process used by genes to increase their diversity. This process is mainly executed by specific classes of RNA binding proteins that act in a dosage-dependent manner to include or exclude selected exons in the final transcripts. While these processes are tightly regulated in cells and tissues, little is known on how the dosage of these factors is achieved and maintained. Several recent studies have suggested that alternative RNA splicing may be in part modulated by microRNAs (miRNAs), which are short, non-coding RNAs (~22 nt in length) that inhibit translation of specific mRNA transcripts. As evidenced in tissues and in diseases, such as cancer and neurological disorders, the dysregulation of miRNA pathways disrupts downstream alternative RNA splicing events by altering the dosage of splicing factors involved in RNA splicing. This attractive model suggests that miRNAs can not only influence the dosage of gene expression at the post-transcriptional level but also indirectly interfere in pre-mRNA splicing at the co-transcriptional level. The purpose of this review is to compile and analyze recent studies on miRNAs modulating alternative RNA splicing factors, and how these events contribute to transcript rearrangements in tissue development and disease.
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[
Annu Rev Cell Dev Biol,
2002]
In Caenorhabditis elegans the timing of many developmental events is regulated by heterochronic genes. Such genes orchestrate the timing of cell divisions and fates appropriate for the developmental stage of an organism. Analyses of heterochronic mutations in the nematode C. elegans have revealed a genetic pathway that controls the timing of post-embryonic cell divisions and fates. Two of the genes in this pathway encode small regulatory RNAs. The 22 nucleotide (nt) RNAs downregulate the expression of protein-coding mRNAs of target heterochronic genes. Analogous variations in the timing of appearance of particular features have been noted among closely related species, suggesting that such explicit control of developmental timing may not be exclusive to C. elegans. In fact, some of the genes that globally pattern the temporal progression of C. elegans development, including one of the tiny RNA genes, are conserved and temporally regulated across much of animal phylogeny, suggesting that the molecular mechanisms of temporal control are ancient and universal. A very large family of tiny RNA genes called microRNAs, which are similar in structure to the heterochronic regulatory RNAs, have been detected in diverse animal species and are likely to be present in most metazoans. Functions of the newly discovered microRNAs are not yet known. Other examples of temporal programs during growth include the exquisitely choreographed temporal sequences of developmental fates in neurogenesis in Drosophila and the sequential programs of epidermal coloration in insect wing patterning. An interesting possibility is that microRNAs mediate transitions on a variety of time scales to pattern the activities of particular target protein-coding genes and in turn generate sets of cells over a period of time. Plasticity in these microRNA genes or their targets may lead to changes in relative developmental timing between related species, or heterochronic change. Instead of inventing new gene functions, even subtle changes in temporal expression of pre-existing control genes can result in speciation by altering the time at which they function.