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Tdrkh is essential for spermatogenesis and participates in primary piRNA biogenesis in the germline
Author(s) -
Saxe Jonathan P,
Chen Mengjie,
Zhao Hongyu,
Lin Haifan
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
the embo journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.484
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1460-2075
pISSN - 0261-4189
DOI - 10.1038/emboj.2013.121
Subject(s) - piwi interacting rna , biology , biogenesis , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics , germline , population , rna , rna interference , gene , demography , sociology
Piwi proteins and Piwi‐interacting RNAs (piRNAs) repress transposition, regulate translation, and guide epigenetic programming in the germline. Here, we show that an evolutionarily conserved Tudor and KH domain‐containing protein, Tdrkh (a.k.a. Tdrd2), is required for spermatogenesis and involved in piRNA biogenesis. Tdrkh partners with Miwi and Miwi2 via symmetrically dimethylated arginine residues in Miwi and Miwi2. Tdrkh is a mitochondrial protein often juxtaposed to pi‐bodies and piP‐bodies and is required for Tdrd1 cytoplasmic localization and Miwi2 nuclear localization. Tdrkh mutants display meiotic arrest at the zygotene stage, attenuate methylation of Line1 DNA, and upregulate Line1 RNA and protein, without inducing apoptosis. Furthermore, Tdrkh mutants have severely reduced levels of mature piRNAs but accumulate a distinct population of 1′U‐containing, 2′O‐methylated 31–37 nt RNAs that largely complement the missing mature piRNAs. Our results demonstrate that the primary piRNA biogenesis pathway involves 3′→5′ processing of 31–37 nt intermediates and that Tdrkh promotes this final step of piRNA biogenesis but not the ping‐pong cycle. These results shed light on mechanisms underlying primary piRNA biogenesis, an area in which information is conspicuously absent.

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