| Literature DB >> 23702463 |
Gero Doose1, Maria Alexis, Rebecca Kirsch, Sven Findeiß, David Langenberger, Rainer Machné, Mario Mörl, Steve Hoffmann, Peter F Stadler.
Abstract
Prokaryotic transcripts constitute almost always uninterrupted intervals when mapped back to the genome. Split reads, i.e., RNA-seq reads consisting of parts that only map to discontiguous loci, are thus disregarded in most analysis pipelines. There are, however, some well-known exceptions, in particular, tRNA splicing and circularized small RNAs in Archaea as well as self-splicing introns. Here, we reanalyze a series of published RNA-seq data sets, screening them specifically for non-contiguously mapping reads. We recover most of the known cases together with several novel archaeal ncRNAs associated with circularized products. In Eubacteria, only a handful of interesting candidates were obtained beyond a few previously described group I and group II introns. Most of the atypically mapping reads do not appear to correspond to well-defined, specifically processed products. Whether this diffuse background is, at least in part, an incidental by-product of prokaryotic RNA processing or whether it consists entirely of technical artifacts of reverse transcription or amplification remains unknown.Keywords: RNA-seq; circular sRNAs; self-splicing introns; split tRNAs
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23702463 PMCID: PMC3849169 DOI: 10.4161/rna.24972
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RNA Biol ISSN: 1547-6286 Impact factor: 4.652