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Deep annotation of Drosophila melanogaster microRNAs yields insights into their processing, modification, and emergence
Author(s) -
Eugène Berezikov,
Nicolas Robine,
Anastasia Samsonova,
Jakub Orzechowski Westholm,
Ammar S. Naqvi,
JuiHung Hung,
Katsutomo Okamura,
Qi Dai,
Diane Bortolamiol-Bécet,
Raquel Martín-Folgar,
Yongjun Zhao,
Phillip D. Zamore,
Gregory J. Han,
Marco A. Marra,
Zhiping Weng,
Norbert Perrimon,
Eric C. Lai
Publication year - 2010
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.116657.110
Subject(s) - biology , dicer , microrna , drosha , genetics , argonaute , drosophila melanogaster , computational biology , rna interference , deep sequencing , small rna , rna , genome , gene
Since the initial annotation of miRNAs from cloned short RNAs by the Ambros, Tuschl, and Bartel groups in 2001, more than a hundred studies have sought to identify additional miRNAs in various species. We report here a meta-analysis of short RNA data from Drosophila melanogaster, aggregating published libraries with 76 data sets that we generated for the modENCODE project. In total, we began with more than 1 billion raw reads from 187 libraries comprising diverse developmental stages, specific tissue- and cell-types, mutant conditions, and/or Argonaute immunoprecipitations. We elucidated several features of known miRNA loci, including multiple phased byproducts of cropping and dicing, abundant alternative 5' termini of certain miRNAs, frequent 3' untemplated additions, and potential editing events. We also identified 49 novel genomic locations of miRNA production, and 61 additional candidate loci with limited evidence for miRNA biogenesis. Although these loci broaden the Drosophila miRNA catalog, this work supports the notion that a restricted set of cellular transcripts is competent to be specifically processed by the Drosha/Dicer-1 pathway. Unexpectedly, we detected miRNA production from coding and untranslated regions of mRNAs and found the phenomenon of miRNA production from the antisense strand of known loci to be common. Altogether, this study lays a comprehensive foundation for the study of miRNA diversity and evolution in a complex animal model.

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