Cargando…

Structural and Functional Analysis of Viral siRNAs

A large amount of short interfering RNA (vsiRNA) is generated from plant viruses during infection, but the function, structure and biogenesis of these is not understood. We profiled vsiRNAs using two different high-throughput sequencing platforms and also developed a hybridisation based array approa...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Szittya, Gyorgy, Moxon, Simon, Pantaleo, Vitantonio, Toth, Gabor, Rusholme Pilcher, Rachel L., Moulton, Vincent, Burgyan, Jozsef, Dalmay, Tamas
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2848561/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20368973
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000838
_version_ 1782179682844672000
author Szittya, Gyorgy
Moxon, Simon
Pantaleo, Vitantonio
Toth, Gabor
Rusholme Pilcher, Rachel L.
Moulton, Vincent
Burgyan, Jozsef
Dalmay, Tamas
author_facet Szittya, Gyorgy
Moxon, Simon
Pantaleo, Vitantonio
Toth, Gabor
Rusholme Pilcher, Rachel L.
Moulton, Vincent
Burgyan, Jozsef
Dalmay, Tamas
author_sort Szittya, Gyorgy
collection PubMed
description A large amount of short interfering RNA (vsiRNA) is generated from plant viruses during infection, but the function, structure and biogenesis of these is not understood. We profiled vsiRNAs using two different high-throughput sequencing platforms and also developed a hybridisation based array approach. The profiles obtained through the Solexa platform and by hybridisation were very similar to each other but different from the 454 profile. Both deep sequencing techniques revealed a strong bias in vsiRNAs for the positive strand of the virus and identified regions on the viral genome that produced vsiRNA in much higher abundance than other regions. The hybridisation approach also showed that the position of highly abundant vsiRNAs was the same in different plant species and in the absence of RDR6. We used the Terminator 5′-Phosphate-Dependent Exonuclease to study the 5′ end of vsiRNAs and showed that a perfect control duplex was not digested by the enzyme without denaturation and that the efficiency of the Terminator was strongly affected by the concentration of the substrate. We found that most vsiRNAs have 5′ monophosphates, which was also confirmed by profiling short RNA libraries following either direct ligation of adapters to the 5′ end of short RNAs or after replacing any potential 5′ ends with monophosphates. The Terminator experiments also showed that vsiRNAs were not perfect duplexes. Using a sensor construct we also found that regions from the viral genome that were complementary to non-abundant vsiRNAs were targeted in planta just as efficiently as regions recognised by abundant vsiRNAs. Different high-throughput sequencing techniques have different reproducible sequence bias and generate different profiles of short RNAs. The Terminator exonuclease does not process double stranded RNA, and because short RNAs can quickly re-anneal at high concentration, this assay can be misleading if the substrate is not denatured and not analysed in a dilution series. The sequence profiles and Terminator digests suggest that CymRSV siRNAs are produced from the structured positive strand rather than from perfect double stranded RNA or by RNA dependent RNA polymerase.
format Text
id pubmed-2848561
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2010
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-28485612010-04-05 Structural and Functional Analysis of Viral siRNAs Szittya, Gyorgy Moxon, Simon Pantaleo, Vitantonio Toth, Gabor Rusholme Pilcher, Rachel L. Moulton, Vincent Burgyan, Jozsef Dalmay, Tamas PLoS Pathog Research Article A large amount of short interfering RNA (vsiRNA) is generated from plant viruses during infection, but the function, structure and biogenesis of these is not understood. We profiled vsiRNAs using two different high-throughput sequencing platforms and also developed a hybridisation based array approach. The profiles obtained through the Solexa platform and by hybridisation were very similar to each other but different from the 454 profile. Both deep sequencing techniques revealed a strong bias in vsiRNAs for the positive strand of the virus and identified regions on the viral genome that produced vsiRNA in much higher abundance than other regions. The hybridisation approach also showed that the position of highly abundant vsiRNAs was the same in different plant species and in the absence of RDR6. We used the Terminator 5′-Phosphate-Dependent Exonuclease to study the 5′ end of vsiRNAs and showed that a perfect control duplex was not digested by the enzyme without denaturation and that the efficiency of the Terminator was strongly affected by the concentration of the substrate. We found that most vsiRNAs have 5′ monophosphates, which was also confirmed by profiling short RNA libraries following either direct ligation of adapters to the 5′ end of short RNAs or after replacing any potential 5′ ends with monophosphates. The Terminator experiments also showed that vsiRNAs were not perfect duplexes. Using a sensor construct we also found that regions from the viral genome that were complementary to non-abundant vsiRNAs were targeted in planta just as efficiently as regions recognised by abundant vsiRNAs. Different high-throughput sequencing techniques have different reproducible sequence bias and generate different profiles of short RNAs. The Terminator exonuclease does not process double stranded RNA, and because short RNAs can quickly re-anneal at high concentration, this assay can be misleading if the substrate is not denatured and not analysed in a dilution series. The sequence profiles and Terminator digests suggest that CymRSV siRNAs are produced from the structured positive strand rather than from perfect double stranded RNA or by RNA dependent RNA polymerase. Public Library of Science 2010-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2848561/ /pubmed/20368973 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000838 Text en Szittya et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Szittya, Gyorgy
Moxon, Simon
Pantaleo, Vitantonio
Toth, Gabor
Rusholme Pilcher, Rachel L.
Moulton, Vincent
Burgyan, Jozsef
Dalmay, Tamas
Structural and Functional Analysis of Viral siRNAs
title Structural and Functional Analysis of Viral siRNAs
title_full Structural and Functional Analysis of Viral siRNAs
title_fullStr Structural and Functional Analysis of Viral siRNAs
title_full_unstemmed Structural and Functional Analysis of Viral siRNAs
title_short Structural and Functional Analysis of Viral siRNAs
title_sort structural and functional analysis of viral sirnas
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2848561/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20368973
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000838
work_keys_str_mv AT szittyagyorgy structuralandfunctionalanalysisofviralsirnas
AT moxonsimon structuralandfunctionalanalysisofviralsirnas
AT pantaleovitantonio structuralandfunctionalanalysisofviralsirnas
AT tothgabor structuralandfunctionalanalysisofviralsirnas
AT rusholmepilcherrachell structuralandfunctionalanalysisofviralsirnas
AT moultonvincent structuralandfunctionalanalysisofviralsirnas
AT burgyanjozsef structuralandfunctionalanalysisofviralsirnas
AT dalmaytamas structuralandfunctionalanalysisofviralsirnas