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Circular RNAs are a large class of animal RNAs with regulatory potency
Author(s) -
Sebastian Memczak,
Marvin Jens,
Antigoni Elefsinioti,
Francesca Torti,
Janna Krueger,
Agnieszka Rybak,
Libby Maier,
Sebastian D. Mackowiak,
Lea H. Gregersen,
Mathias Munschauer,
Alexander Loewer,
Ulrike Ziebold,
Markus Landthaler,
Christine Kocks,
Ferdinand le Noble,
Nikolaus Rajewsky
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.993
H-Index - 1226
eISSN - 1476-4687
pISSN - 0028-0836
DOI - 10.1038/nature11928
Subject(s) - circular rna , microrna , biology , non coding rna , genetics , rna , computational biology , function (biology) , long non coding rna , zebrafish , exon , microbiology and biotechnology , gene
Circular RNAs (circRNAs) in animals are an enigmatic class of RNA with unknown function. To explore circRNAs systematically, we sequenced and computationally analysed human, mouse and nematode RNA. We detected thousands of well-expressed, stable circRNAs, often showing tissue/developmental-stage-specific expression. Sequence analysis indicated important regulatory functions for circRNAs. We found that a human circRNA, antisense to the cerebellar degeneration-related protein 1 transcript (CDR1as), is densely bound by microRNA (miRNA) effector complexes and harbours 63 conserved binding sites for the ancient miRNA miR-7. Further analyses indicated that CDR1as functions to bind miR-7 in neuronal tissues. Human CDR1as expression in zebrafish impaired midbrain development, similar to knocking down miR-7, suggesting that CDR1as is a miRNA antagonist with a miRNA-binding capacity ten times higher than any other known transcript. Together, our data provide evidence that circRNAs form a large class of post-transcriptional regulators. Numerous circRNAs form by head-to-tail splicing of exons, suggesting previously unrecognized regulatory potential of coding sequences.

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