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Novel long non-protein coding RNAs involved in Arabidopsis differentiation and stress responses
Author(s) -
Besma Ben Amor,
Sonia Wirth,
Francisco Merchán,
Philippe Laporte,
Yves d’Aubenton-Carafa,
Judith Hirsch,
Alexis Maizel,
Allison Mallory,
Antoine Lucas,
JeanMarc Deragon,
Hervé Vaucheret,
Claude Thermes,
Martín Crespi
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
genome research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.556
H-Index - 297
eISSN - 1549-5469
pISSN - 1088-9051
DOI - 10.1101/gr.080275.108
Subject(s) - biology , arabidopsis , transcriptome , tiling array , microrna , gene , rna , mutant , genetics , small rna , gene expression , non coding rna , microbiology and biotechnology
Long non-protein coding RNAs (npcRNA) represent an emerging class of riboregulators, which either act directly in this long form or are processed to shorter miRNA and siRNA. Genome-wide bioinformatic analysis of full-length cDNA databases identified 76 Arabidopsis npcRNAs. Fourteen npcRNAs were antisense to protein-coding mRNAs, suggesting cis-regulatory roles. Numerous 24-nt siRNA matched to five different npcRNAs, suggesting that these npcRNAs are precursors of this type of siRNA. Expression analyses of the 76 npcRNAs identified a novel npcRNA that accumulates in a dcl1 mutant but does not appear to produce trans-acting siRNA or miRNA. Additionally, another npcRNA was the precursor of miR869 and shown to be up-regulated in dcl4 but not in dcl1 mutants, indicative of a young miRNA gene. Abiotic stress altered the accumulation of 22 npcRNAs among the 76, a fraction significantly higher than that observed for the RNA binding protein-coding fraction of the transcriptome. Overexpression analyses in Arabidopsis identified two npcRNAs as regulators of root growth during salt stress and leaf morphology, respectively. Hence, together with small RNAs, long npcRNAs encompass a sensitive component of the transcriptome that have diverse roles during growth and differentiation.

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