Literature DB >> 20953170

Maternal mRNA deadenylation and decay by the piRNA pathway in the early Drosophila embryo.

Christel Rouget1, Catherine Papin, Anthony Boureux, Anne-Cécile Meunier, Bénédicte Franco, Nicolas Robine, Eric C Lai, Alain Pelisson, Martine Simonelig.   

Abstract

Piwi-associated RNAs (piRNAs), a specific class of 24- to 30-nucleotide-long RNAs produced by the Piwi-type of Argonaute proteins, have a specific germline function in repressing transposable elements. This repression is thought to involve heterochromatin formation and transcriptional and post-transcriptional silencing. The piRNA pathway has other essential functions in germline stem cell maintenance and in maintaining germline DNA integrity. Here we uncover an unexpected function of the piRNA pathway in the decay of maternal messenger RNAs and in translational repression in the early embryo. A subset of maternal mRNAs is degraded in the embryo at the maternal-to-zygotic transition. In Drosophila, maternal mRNA degradation depends on the RNA-binding protein Smaug and the deadenylase CCR4, as well as the zygotic expression of a microRNA cluster. Using mRNA encoding the embryonic posterior morphogen Nanos (Nos) as a paradigm to study maternal mRNA decay, we found that CCR4-mediated deadenylation of nos depends on components of the piRNA pathway including piRNAs complementary to a specific region in the nos 3' untranslated region. Reduced deadenylation when piRNA-induced regulation is impaired correlates with nos mRNA stabilization and translational derepression in the embryo, resulting in head development defects. Aubergine, one of the Argonaute proteins in the piRNA pathway, is present in a complex with Smaug, CCR4, nos mRNA and piRNAs that target the nos 3' untranslated region, in the bulk of the embryo. We propose that piRNAs and their associated proteins act together with Smaug to recruit the CCR4 deadenylation complex to specific mRNAs, thus promoting their decay. Because the piRNAs involved in this regulation are produced from transposable elements, this identifies a direct developmental function for transposable elements in the regulation of gene expression.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20953170      PMCID: PMC4505748          DOI: 10.1038/nature09465

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  40 in total

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Authors:  Nicolas Robine; Nelson C Lau; Sudha Balla; Zhigang Jin; Katsutomo Okamura; Satomi Kuramochi-Miyagawa; Michael D Blower; Eric C Lai
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Authors:  A N Harris; P M Macdonald
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  198 in total

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Review 8.  Germ Line Versus Soma in the Transition from Egg to Embryo.

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9.  Piwi regulates Vasa accumulation during embryogenesis in the sea urchin.

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10.  C-terminal residues specific to Vasa among DEAD-box helicases are required for its functions in piRNA biogenesis and embryonic patterning.

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