| Literature DB >> 16954537 |
Eugene Berezikov1, Geert van Tetering, Mark Verheul, Jose van de Belt, Linda van Laake, Joost Vos, Robert Verloop, Marc van de Wetering, Victor Guryev, Shuji Takada, Anton Jan van Zonneveld, Hiroyuki Mano, Ronald Plasterk, Edwin Cuppen.
Abstract
MicroRNAs are 20- to 23-nucleotide RNA molecules that can regulate gene expression. Currently > 400 microRNAs have been experimentally identified in mammalian genomes, whereas estimates go up to 1000 and beyond. Here we show that many more mammalian microRNAs exist. We discovered novel microRNA candidates using two approaches: testing of computationally predicted microRNAs by a modified microarray-based detection system, and cloning and sequencing of large numbers of small RNAs from different human and mouse tissues. Together these efforts experimentally identified 348 novel mouse and 81 novel human microRNA candidate genes. Most novel microRNAs candidates are not conserved beyond mammals, and ~10% are taxon-specific. Our analyses indicate that the entire microRNA repertoire is not remotely exhausted.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16954537 PMCID: PMC1581438 DOI: 10.1101/gr.5159906
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Res ISSN: 1088-9051 Impact factor: 9.043