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The Mechanism Selecting the Guide Strand from Small RNA Duplexes is Different Among Argonaute Proteins
Author(s) -
Atsushi Takeda,
Shintaro Iwasaki,
Toshiaki Watanabe,
Maki Utsumi,
Yuichiro Watanabe
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
plant and cell physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.975
H-Index - 152
eISSN - 1471-9053
pISSN - 0032-0781
DOI - 10.1093/pcp/pcn043
Subject(s) - dicer , argonaute , rna , small rna , biology , rna silencing , trans acting sirna , genetics , microbiology and biotechnology , non coding rna , rna dependent rna polymerase , small nucleolar rna , small interfering rna , gene , rna interference
Double-stranded RNA induces RNA silencing and is cleaved into 21-24 nt small RNA duplexes by Dicer enzyme. A strand of Dicer-generated small RNA duplex (called the guide strand) is then selected by a thermodynamic mechanism to associate with Argonaute (AGO) protein. This AGO-small RNA complex functions to cleave mRNA, repress translation or modify chromatin structure in a sequence-specific manner. Although a model plant, Arabidopsis thaliana, contains 10 AGO genes, their roles and molecular mechanisms remain obscure. In this study, we analyzed the roles of Arabidopsis AGO2 and AGO5. Interestingly, the 5' nucleotide of small RNAs that associated with AGO2 was mainly adenine (85.7%) and that with AGO5 was mainly cytosine (83.5%). Small RNAs that were abundantly cloned from the AGO2 immunoprecipitation fraction (miR163-LL, which is derived from the Lower Left of mature miR163 in pre-miR163, and miR390) and from the AGO5 immunoprecipitation fraction (miR163-UL, which is derived from the Upper Left of mature miR163 in pre-miR163, and miR390(*)) are derived from the single small RNA duplexes, miR163-LL/miR163-UL and miR390/miR390(*). Each strand of the miR163-LL/miR163-UL duplex is selectively sorted to associate with AGO2 or AGO5 in a 5' nucleotide-dependent manner rather than in a thermodynamic stability-dependent manner. Furthermore, we showed that both AGO2 and AGO5 have the ability to bind cucumber mosaic virus-derived small RNAs. These results clearly indicate that the mechanism selecting the guide strand is different among AGO proteins and that multiple AGO genes are involved in anti-virus defense in plants.

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