| Literature DB >> 19173032 |
Afsar Raza Naqvi1, Md Nazrul Islam, Nirupam Roy Choudhury, Qazi Mohd Rizwanul Haq.
Abstract
Micro- and short-interfering RNAs represent small RNA family that are recognized as critical regulatory species across the eukaryotes. Recent high-throughput sequencing have revealed two more hidden players of the cellular small RNA pool. Reported in mammals and Caenorhabditis elegans respectively, these new small RNAs are named piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) and 21U-RNAs. Moreover, small RNAs including miRNAs have been identified in unicellular alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, redefining the earlier concept of multi-cellularity restricted presence of these molecules. The discovery of these species of small RNAs has allowed us to understand better the usage of genome and the number of genes present but also have complicated the situation in terms of biochemical attributes and functional genesis of these molecules. Nonetheless, these new pools of knowledge have opened up avenues for unraveling the finer details of the small RNA mediated pathways.Entities:
Keywords: 21-U RNA; argonaute; dicer; miRNA; mirtron.; piRNA; siRNA
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19173032 PMCID: PMC2631224 DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.5.97
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Sci ISSN: 1449-2288 Impact factor: 6.580
Figure 1siRNA pathway: Precursor dsRNA are generated by either (a) RNA dependent RNA polymerase (RdRP) activity on aberrant transcripts or (b) transcript having full or partial complementarity. (c) These are recognized and processed by nuclear Dicer (different from the one involved in microRNA pathway) and this siRNA-Dicer complex is then exported to cytoplasm. (d) The siRNA- Dicer complex then recruits Argonaute that unwind the duplex to form si-RISC/RITS. (e) Transcripts bearing complementary sequences to guide siRNA strand are cleaved by RNase activity of Argonaute2. (f) To confer immunity, siRNAs-Dicer complex may also traffic in systemic fashion (g) that is achieved by Systemic RNA Interference-Defective (SID-1; in animals)/ Phloem Small RNA binding protein-1 (PSRP1; in plants). (h) The exogenous siRNA pathway follows parallel to endogenous pathway, but differs in the fact that the cytoplasmic Dicer generates the siRNA duplexes. The RITS complex lead to transcriptional gene silencing that involves various proteins.
Figure 2The general domain organization of (a) Dicer and (b) Argonaute proteins. The functions of few domains that have been predicted through crystal structures and mutant analysis are mentioned.
Figure 3MicroRNA pathway: (a) After being transcribed, the pri-miRNAs stem-loop structure is acted upon by (b) Drosha (that also confers to miRNA strand and target specificity) and generates pre-miRNA. Sometimes, these precursors are edited by Adenosine Deaminase Acting on RNA (ADARs) at specific positions (generally +4 and +44) changing adenine to inosine. In plants, the DCL1 generates miR duplex in the nucleus that is methylated at terminal bases by HEN1. (c) These are then transported to cytoplasm with the assistance of Exportin-5/ HASTY. From here (d) Dicer comes into play (in animals) and generates miRNA duplexes that will be incorporated into micro Ribo-Nucleo-Protein (mi-RNP) complex. After the removal of passenger strand mature miRNA then guides the functional protein complex to the targets. (e) In mammals, miRNAs bearing nuclear signal sequences can traffic back to the nucleus. Depending upon the proteins associated with miRNA leads to either (f) cleavage of target mRNA or modulate the translation turnover by (g) translation activation or repression of respective mRNAs. The repressed mRNAs are transferred to structures called P-bodies.
Comparison between siRNAs and miRNAs among plants and animals.
| Animals | Plants | |
|---|---|---|
| Usually, single dicer involved in all types of siRNA generation | Different dicers required in | |
| Redundancy at functional level not observed | Major proteins (dicer, argonaute) are functionally redundant | |
| Systemic spread requires SID-1 protein | Systemic spread requires PRSP1 (cucurbits) and SNF2 ( | |
| Target cleavage, DNA methylation | Target cleavage, DNA methylation | |
| siRNAs can participate in genomic DNA elimination | No such role attributed here | |
| Generally, target repression | Generally, target cleavage | |
| More than one miR can reside on pri-miR | Strictly one miR from one pri-miR | |
| Target various mRNAs | More biased towards TF transcripts | |
| Multiple miRNA binding sites per target | Usually single with one exception | |
| More than one miRNA can bind target | No report | |
| Duplex miRs are formed in cytosol | Duplexes miRs are formed inside nucleus | |
| Mature miRNAs can be trafficked back to nucleus | No such validated report | |
| Pri- or pre-miR are subjected to editing | No such phenomena observed | |
| Repressed mRNAs are stored in special organelles called P-bodies | No such structure observed |
Figure 4Schematic diagram to depict differences between mirtron and canonical miRNA generation. Introns that assume foldback structures are recognized and cleaved by DROSHA. These stem-loop lariats are then acted upon by Lariat debranching enzyme that cleaves the phosphor-diester bond formed during splicing event. The pri- miR thus formed joins the mainstream miRNA flux, before making exit to cytoplasm.
Figure 5Schematic representation of the pri-miRNA transcripts of (i) animal, (ii) plant, and (iii) alga showing differences in the miRNA biogenesis. Note that not all animal and algal pri-miRNAs follow this structural representation but it holds for plants where single miRNA resides within pri-miRNA stem.
Figure 6Schematic representation of time-point specific expression each piRNA species follows during spermatogenesis.
Figure 7piRNA biogenesis pathway. (a) Usually a polycistronic transcript, driven by mono- or bidirectional promoter, generates piRNAs by an unknown mechanism. Since the precursor lacks any tendency to achieve double-stranded form, the piRNA biogenesis seemed to be different from other small RNAs. (b) The biogenesis requires template to catalyze generation of desired small RNAs which further cleave corresponding target messages with another set of proteins. These piRNA may either regulate genome organization by checking transposon mobility or move to cytoplasm to take care of cognate messages either by cleaving or stabilizing them.
Figure 8General structure of 21U-RNA locus
Figure 921U-RNA pathway. Dictated by their own promoters, the independent transcripts are made that may involve specific factors to sense the terminal U residue and the 21 nt, thereby releasing mature 21-U RNAs.
Proteins (other than DCL and AGO) involved in small RNA biogenesis and their downstream function(s).
| Organisms | RNAi players known | Location & Function | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Animals | Drosha | Nuclear; RNase III type enzyme that binds dsRNA with characteristic structures and generates pre-miR forms by cleaving pri-miRs. | 66 |
| DGCR8/Pasha | Nuclear; dsRNA binding protein assists Drosha function | 67 | |
| PIWI | Nuclear; Ago subfamily protein generating piRNAs | 68, 69 | |
| MILI | Nuclear; Ago subfamily protein generating piRNAs | 70 | |
| Exportin5 /RanGTPase | Nucleo-cytoplasmic; Transports pre-miR to cytoplasm | 71, 72 | |
| Swi6/ HP1 | Nuclear; Heterochromatin formation | 53, 73 | |
| Chp1/ Twi | Nuclear; Heterochromatin formation | 74 | |
| Plants | PSRP1 | Cytoplasmic; Binds and Transports small RNAs across phloem | 58 |
| HYL1 | Nuclear; Interacts with DCL1 and confer stability to miR precursors | 75 | |
| HEN1 | Nuclear; protects duplex small RNAs by 3′ end methylation | 76 | |
| HASTY | Nuclear-membrane; export of duplex small RNAs to cytoplasm | 77 | |
| SDE3/ RDR | Nucleo- cytoplasmic; Performs catalysis of ds long RNA generation that can initiate different RNAi pathways | 78, 79 | |
| Serrate | Nuclear; Binds to pri-miRs in association with DCL1 and HYL1 and helps in processing. | 80 | |
| TUDOR-SN | Cytoplasmic, ds RNA binding putative helicase | 81 | |
| SID1 | Transmembrane protein, responsible for systemic nature of RNAi | 57 | |
| RDE-4 | Cytoplasmic; Interact with Dicer1, R2D2-like protein | 82 | |
| VIG, Fmr1 | Cytoplasmic; component of RISC | 83 | |
| Loquacious | Cellular; dsRNA binding protein, associates with dicer and participates in miRNA maturation and believed to play crucial role in maintaining germ-line stem cells | 84 | |
| R2D2 | Cytoplasmic; binds to siRNAs with Dicer help in processing and confers asymmetry to siRNAs. | 85 | |
| Armitage | Cytoplasmic; | 44 | |
| Pimet | Nuclear; Homolog of | 86 |
Comparison between different small RNA species.
| siRNAs | miRNAs | piRNAs | 21U-RNAs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Length (in nts) | 21-24 | ~22 | 25-31 | 21 |
| Requirement of dsRNA precursor | Yes | Yes | No | No |
| Genomic location | Dispersed throughout | Dispersed throughout | Discrete loci | Chromosome IV |
| Frequency (in %) of 5′ U Monophophate | ~80% | ~76% | ~94% | 100% |
| Location of Biogenesis | Cytoplasm/Nucleus | Nucleus and Cytoplasm | Nucleus? | Nucleus |
| Nature of gene | Autonomous /clustered | Autonomous | Tightly clustered | Autonomous |
| Proteins strictly associated with biogenesis (animals) | Dcr 2, AGO2 | Dcr 1, AGO1, Drosha/ Pasha, Exportin-5 | Piwi/ Aubergine, AGO3 | ? |
| Detected in | All eukaryotes studied | All eukaryotes but S. cerevisiae | Worms, Zebrafish mammals | C. elegans, C. briggsae |
| Expression | All tissues | Every tissue but few shows tissue specificity | Male germ line cells | All tissues |
| Downstream effects | Target cleavage, Chromatin remodeling, Translation repression, Genome reorganization | Translation repression, Target cleavage, Chromatin remodeling? | Genome organization, Enhances translation and mRNA stability | Nucleosome phasing |
| 3´ end modification | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Mode of transcription | Divergent but partial overlapping Convergent | Autonomous | Divergent | Autonomous |
| Strand biasedness | Yes | Yes | High | Yes |
| Selection pressure | No | High | No | No |
| Nature of transcript | Polycistronic | Polycistronic/ Monocistronic | Polycistronic | Monocistronic |
| Potential tool without adverse effects | Yes | In plants | No | No |