| Literature DB >> 25713380 |
Eric Londin1, Phillipe Loher1, Aristeidis G Telonis1, Kevin Quann1, Peter Clark1, Yi Jing1, Eleftheria Hatzimichael2, Yohei Kirino1, Shozo Honda1, Michelle Lally3, Bharat Ramratnam3, Clay E S Comstock4, Karen E Knudsen5, Leonard Gomella5, George L Spaeth6, Lisa Hark6, L Jay Katz6, Agnieszka Witkiewicz7, Abdolmohamad Rostami8, Sergio A Jimenez9, Michael A Hollingsworth10, Jen Jen Yeh11, Chad A Shaw12, Steven E McKenzie13, Paul Bray13, Peter T Nelson14, Simona Zupo15, Katrien Van Roosbroeck16, Michael J Keating17, George A Calin17, Charles Yeo18, Masaya Jimbo18, Joseph Cozzitorto18, Jonathan R Brody18, Kathleen Delgrosso19, John S Mattick20, Paolo Fortina19, Isidore Rigoutsos21.
Abstract
Two decades after the discovery of the first animal microRNA (miRNA), the number of miRNAs in animal genomes remains a vexing question. Here, we report findings from analyzing 1,323 short RNA sequencing samples (RNA-seq) from 13 different human tissue types. Using stringent thresholding criteria, we identified 3,707 statistically significant novel mature miRNAs at a false discovery rate of ≤ 0.05 arising from 3,494 novel precursors; 91.5% of these novel miRNAs were identified independently in 10 or more of the processed samples. Analysis of these novel miRNAs revealed tissue-specific dependencies and a commensurate low Jaccard similarity index in intertissue comparisons. Of these novel miRNAs, 1,657 (45%) were identified in 43 datasets that were generated by cross-linking followed by Argonaute immunoprecipitation and sequencing (Ago CLIP-seq) and represented 3 of the 13 tissues, indicating that these miRNAs are active in the RNA interference pathway. Moreover, experimental investigation through stem-loop PCR of a random collection of newly discovered miRNAs in 12 cell lines representing 5 tissues confirmed their presence and tissue dependence. Among the newly identified miRNAs are many novel miRNA clusters, new members of known miRNA clusters, previously unreported products from uncharacterized arms of miRNA precursors, and previously unrecognized paralogues of functionally important miRNA families (e.g., miR-15/107). Examination of the sequence conservation across vertebrate and invertebrate organisms showed 56.7% of the newly discovered miRNAs to be human-specific whereas the majority (94.4%) are primate lineage-specific. Our findings suggest that the repertoire of human miRNAs is far more extensive than currently represented by public repositories and that there is a significant number of lineage- and/or tissue-specific miRNAs that are uncharacterized.Entities:
Keywords: RNA sequencing; isomIRs; microRNAs; noncoding RNA; transcriptome
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25713380 PMCID: PMC4364231 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1420955112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205