Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Widespread Long Noncoding RNAs as Endogenous Target Mimics for MicroRNAs in Plants

2013; Oxford University Press; Volume: 161; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1104/pp.113.215962

ISSN

1532-2548

Autores

Hua‐Jun Wu, Zhimin Wang, Meng Wang, Xiu‐Jie Wang,

Tópico(s)

Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms

Resumo

Abstract Target mimicry is a recently identified regulatory mechanism for microRNA (miRNA) functions in plants in which the decoy RNAs bind to miRNAs via complementary sequences and therefore block the interaction between miRNAs and their authentic targets. Both endogenous decoy RNAs (miRNA target mimics) and engineered artificial RNAs can induce target mimicry effects. Yet until now, only the Induced by Phosphate Starvation1 RNA has been proven to be a functional endogenous microRNA target mimic (eTM). In this work, we developed a computational method and systematically identified intergenic or noncoding gene-originated eTMs for 20 conserved miRNAs in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and rice (Oryza sativa). The predicted miRNA binding sites were well conserved among eTMs of the same miRNA, whereas sequences outside of the binding sites varied a lot. We proved that the eTMs of miR160 and miR166 are functional target mimics and identified their roles in the regulation of plant development. The effectiveness of eTMs for three other miRNAs was also confirmed by transient agroinfiltration assay.

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