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Analysis of Nearly One Thousand Mammalian Mirtrons Reveals Novel Features of Dicer Substrates

Mirtrons are microRNA (miRNA) substrates that utilize the splicing machinery to bypass the necessity of Drosha cleavage for their biogenesis. Expanding our recent efforts for mammalian mirtron annotation, we use meta-analysis of aggregate datasets to identify ~500 novel mouse and human introns that...

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Autores principales: Wen, Jiayu, Ladewig, Erik, Shenker, Sol, Mohammed, Jaaved, Lai, Eric C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4556696/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26325366
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004441
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author Wen, Jiayu
Ladewig, Erik
Shenker, Sol
Mohammed, Jaaved
Lai, Eric C.
author_facet Wen, Jiayu
Ladewig, Erik
Shenker, Sol
Mohammed, Jaaved
Lai, Eric C.
author_sort Wen, Jiayu
collection PubMed
description Mirtrons are microRNA (miRNA) substrates that utilize the splicing machinery to bypass the necessity of Drosha cleavage for their biogenesis. Expanding our recent efforts for mammalian mirtron annotation, we use meta-analysis of aggregate datasets to identify ~500 novel mouse and human introns that confidently generate diced small RNA duplexes. These comprise nearly 1000 total loci distributed in four splicing-mediated biogenesis subclasses, with 5'-tailed mirtrons as, by far, the dominant subtype. Thus, mirtrons surprisingly comprise a substantial fraction of endogenous Dicer substrates in mammalian genomes. Although mirtron-derived small RNAs exhibit overall expression correlation with their host mRNAs, we observe a subset with substantial differences that suggest regulated processing or accumulation. We identify characteristic sequence, length, and structural features of mirtron loci that distinguish them from bulk introns, and find that mirtrons preferentially emerge from genes with larger numbers of introns. While mirtrons generate miRNA-class regulatory RNAs, we also find that mirtrons exhibit many features that distinguish them from canonical miRNAs. We observe that conventional mirtron hairpins are substantially longer than Drosha-generated pre-miRNAs, indicating that the characteristic length of canonical pre-miRNAs is not a general feature of Dicer substrate hairpins. In addition, mammalian mirtrons exhibit unique patterns of ordered 5' and 3' heterogeneity, which reveal hidden complexity in miRNA processing pathways. These include broad 3'-uridylation of mirtron hairpins, atypically heterogeneous 5' termini that may result from exonucleolytic processing, and occasionally robust decapitation of the 5' guanine (G) of mirtron-5p species defined by splicing. Altogether, this study reveals that this extensive class of non-canonical miRNA bears a multitude of characteristic properties, many of which raise general mechanistic questions regarding the processing of endogenous hairpin transcripts.
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spelling pubmed-45566962015-09-10 Analysis of Nearly One Thousand Mammalian Mirtrons Reveals Novel Features of Dicer Substrates Wen, Jiayu Ladewig, Erik Shenker, Sol Mohammed, Jaaved Lai, Eric C. PLoS Comput Biol Research Article Mirtrons are microRNA (miRNA) substrates that utilize the splicing machinery to bypass the necessity of Drosha cleavage for their biogenesis. Expanding our recent efforts for mammalian mirtron annotation, we use meta-analysis of aggregate datasets to identify ~500 novel mouse and human introns that confidently generate diced small RNA duplexes. These comprise nearly 1000 total loci distributed in four splicing-mediated biogenesis subclasses, with 5'-tailed mirtrons as, by far, the dominant subtype. Thus, mirtrons surprisingly comprise a substantial fraction of endogenous Dicer substrates in mammalian genomes. Although mirtron-derived small RNAs exhibit overall expression correlation with their host mRNAs, we observe a subset with substantial differences that suggest regulated processing or accumulation. We identify characteristic sequence, length, and structural features of mirtron loci that distinguish them from bulk introns, and find that mirtrons preferentially emerge from genes with larger numbers of introns. While mirtrons generate miRNA-class regulatory RNAs, we also find that mirtrons exhibit many features that distinguish them from canonical miRNAs. We observe that conventional mirtron hairpins are substantially longer than Drosha-generated pre-miRNAs, indicating that the characteristic length of canonical pre-miRNAs is not a general feature of Dicer substrate hairpins. In addition, mammalian mirtrons exhibit unique patterns of ordered 5' and 3' heterogeneity, which reveal hidden complexity in miRNA processing pathways. These include broad 3'-uridylation of mirtron hairpins, atypically heterogeneous 5' termini that may result from exonucleolytic processing, and occasionally robust decapitation of the 5' guanine (G) of mirtron-5p species defined by splicing. Altogether, this study reveals that this extensive class of non-canonical miRNA bears a multitude of characteristic properties, many of which raise general mechanistic questions regarding the processing of endogenous hairpin transcripts. Public Library of Science 2015-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC4556696/ /pubmed/26325366 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004441 Text en © 2015 Wen 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
Wen, Jiayu
Ladewig, Erik
Shenker, Sol
Mohammed, Jaaved
Lai, Eric C.
Analysis of Nearly One Thousand Mammalian Mirtrons Reveals Novel Features of Dicer Substrates
title Analysis of Nearly One Thousand Mammalian Mirtrons Reveals Novel Features of Dicer Substrates
title_full Analysis of Nearly One Thousand Mammalian Mirtrons Reveals Novel Features of Dicer Substrates
title_fullStr Analysis of Nearly One Thousand Mammalian Mirtrons Reveals Novel Features of Dicer Substrates
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of Nearly One Thousand Mammalian Mirtrons Reveals Novel Features of Dicer Substrates
title_short Analysis of Nearly One Thousand Mammalian Mirtrons Reveals Novel Features of Dicer Substrates
title_sort analysis of nearly one thousand mammalian mirtrons reveals novel features of dicer substrates
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4556696/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26325366
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004441
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