You'd Prefer An Argonaute

RNA Journal Club 6/24/10

Posted in RNA Journal Club, RNAJC w/ review by YPAA on July 19, 2010

Target RNA–Directed Trimming and Tailing of Small Silencing RNAs

Stefan L. Ameres, Michael D. Horwich, Jui-Hung Hung, Jia Xu, Megha Ghildiyal, Zhiping Weng, Phillip D. Zamore

Science 328: 1534–1539, 18 June 2010.
DOI: 10.1126/science.1187058

This week’s thorough summary and analysis by Anonymous:

Like you, Drosophila siRNAs’d prefer an Argonaute; in fact their Argonaute of choice is Ago2. And this preference comes with a bonus: Hen1 adds 2′-Omethyl groups to all Ago2-bound small RNAs. In this paper, Ameres et al. attempted to uncover the mystery of the methyl group present in the 3’ end of Drosophila siRNAs, which is absent for most microRNAs. Adding an evolutionary twist to the story, in plants, all small RNAs (including microRNAs) are methylated. The obvious difference between the plant microRNAs and those of animals is the degree of complementarity to their targets. In plants, microRNAs are almost completely complementary to their target, hinting that the addition of the methyl group might be related to how tightly the small RNA is bound to its target.

Ameres et al. transfected several Drosophila cell lines with microRNA sensors, which had one or more fully complementary sites for an intended microRNA.  Normally these microRNAs are loaded to the Ago1; hence, they lack a methyl group in their 3’ end. They showed that levels of endogenously expressed (miR-34 and bantam) and induced (let-7 and miR-125) microRNAs decreased whence the corresponding microRNA sensor is present. Moreover, for another microRNA (miR-277), which can be loaded into both Ago1 and Ago2, they showed that the Ago1-loaded microRNA population is destabilized upon transfection of a microRNA sensor for miR-277. Therefore, Ago1-loaded small RNAs are prone to destabilization when a fully complimentary target is present.

In order to follow the fate of Ago1-loaded and destabilized microRNAs, the authors radiolabeled the 5’ end of let-7 with 32P in the presence of let-7 sensor in vitro and observed new “tailed” and “trimmed” forms of let-7. They also detected tailed and trimmed forms of endogenously expressed bantam in the presence of a bantam-sensor using Drosophila embryo lysates. An addition of 3’ methyl group protected let-7 from being tailed and trimmed, and absence of Hen1 lead to tailing and trimming of let-7 siRNA. Putting all this evidence into context, the authors conclude that the methyl group protects small RNA from destabilization.

To determine the extent of tolerable complementarity between a microRNA and its target that does not lead to microRNA destabilization, the authors changed the sequence of complementarity site of the microRNA sensor. They found that targets resembling classical microRNA target sites did not result in tailing and trimming, whereas the targets that had less than 8 mismatches to the 3’ end of microRNA triggered destabilization. Furthermore, they also discovered that a small central bulge of 3nt leads to trimming and tailing, but not larger bulges. Hence, target RNA-triggered tailing and trimming require extensive but not necessarily perfect complementarity to the microRNAs.

Since Hen1 plays such a major role in protecting Ago2-bound small RNAs, the authors sequenced the small RNAs from hen1 mutant flies. The abundance and the length of microRNAs were not affected by lack of functional Hen1, but endo-siRNAs showed drastic changes in their lengths and abundance. The authors analyzed the content of the tails that arose due to absence of Hen1 and they found that the tail was either a single adenine or a single or multiple uridines, which is a mark of RNA turnover. Lastly, the authors also looked for target RNA-directed trimming and tailing in mammalian cells and confirmed the presence of a similar mechanism with slight modifications.

The Zamore Lab previously characterized RNA sorting in Drosophila, showing that the degree of complementarity between the small RNA and its star strand was responsible for being selectively loaded into Ago1 or Ago2. MicroRNAs are generally loaded into Ago1 to repress target translation and decrease target stability, often mediated by seed-paring between the microRNA and its target. The presence of highly complementary targets for Ago1 loaded small RNAs lead to remodeling of the small RNA by tailing or trimming. Therefore, Ago1 bound small RNAs are specialized in regulating partially complementary sites, which explain why microRNA targets lack extensive complementarity. The authors also speculate that extensive 3’ pairing might result in release of the small RNA from the PAZ domain of Argonaute, which in turn exposes the small RNA to the nucleotidyl transferases and 3’-to-5’ exonuclease enzymes.

Unfortunately we do not know which factors lead to target RNA-directed tailing and trimming and this will be an interesting venue of research in upcoming years. Moreover, the current model fails to explain the existence of highly complementary microRNA target sites present in both mammals and flies. But the paper formulates the question it tries to answer clearly from the beginning and delivers a satisfactory answer.

Citation for researchblogging.org:

Ameres SL, Horwich MD, Hung JH, Xu J, Ghildiyal M, Weng Z, & Zamore PD (2010). Target RNA-directed trimming and tailing of small silencing RNAs. Science, 328 (5985), 1534-9 PMID: 20558712

RNA Journal Club 7/8/10

Posted in RNA Journal Club, RNAJC w/ review by YPAA on July 8, 2010

Down-Regulation of a Host MicroRNA by a Herpesvirus saimiri Noncoding RNA

Demián Cazalla, Therese Yario, Joan Steitz

Science Vol. 328: 1563 – 1566, 18 June 2010.
DOI: 10.1126/science.1187197

This week’s attentive summary and analysis by David Koppstein, his first on the blog:

In this study, Cazalla and colleagues found complementarity of three endogenous microRNAs–miR-27, miR-16, and miR-142-3p–to two noncoding RNAs encoded by Herpesvirus saimiri, HSUR 1 and HSUR 2, which have conserved motifs reminiscent of cellular U snRNAs. They pursued this observation by pulling down Ago2 and looking for these HSURs, and conversely by pulling down Sm proteins and looking for the miRNAs. Interestingly, these CoIPs specifically pulled down the HSURs and miRNAs, respectively, that were bioinformatically predicted to interact. During these experiments, they noticed that a mutant strain of the virus that lacked HSURs 1 and 2 expressed miR-27 at significantly higher levels.

Cazalla and colleagues then performed experiments to determine what was causing the increased levels of miR-27 in the mutant strain. They designed a pulse-chase nucleofection protocol with a radiolabeled synthetic miRNA, and noted a significantly shorter half-life in the presence of HSURs 1 and 2. Since levels of the pre-miRNA and the passenger strand were unchanged, they concluded that the mature miRNA itself must be destabilized.

It was also noted that the destabilization of miR-27 had consequences on the transcriptional landscape of the cell. A validated target of miR-27, FOXO1, which is a transcription factor that is dysregulated in breast, prostate, and endometrial cancers, was observed to be significantly downregulated in the absence of HSUR 1. Cazalla et al. also recapitulated the downregulation of miR-27 in Jurkat T-cells by
combinations of stable lines expressing HSURs and knockdowns using chimeric oligoribonucleotides. Strikingly, they observed that the specificity of HSUR 1 could be artificially switched to target miR-20.

There are several questions raised by this paper. First, there is the tantalizing prospect that the mechanism of destabilization of miR-27 is the same as that described by Ameres et al. in the same edition of Science. Further work, especially deep sequencing analysis of small RNAs, will likely reveal whether this is the case. There is also the mystery of where the interactions between HSURs and miRNAs are taking place; HSURs are thought to be nuclear, but may shuttle to the cytoplasm during their maturation. It is also still unclear what genes are perturbed as a consequence of the decreased miR-27 levels, and how this may affect viral fitness. Finally, one wonders about the functional significance of the interaction of HSURs 1 and 2 with miR-142-3p and miR-16. In summary, this paper presents a novel mechanism by which a virus perturbs host gene expression using noncoding RNA.

Citation for researchblogging.org:

Cazalla D, Yario T, & Steitz J (2010). Down-regulation of a host microRNA by a Herpesvirus saimiri noncoding RNA. Science, 328 (5985), 1563-6 PMID: 20558719

RNA Journal Club 7/1/10

Posted in RNA Journal Club, RNAJC w/ review by YPAA on July 1, 2010

A coding-independent function of gene and pseudogene mRNAs regulates tumour biology

Laura Poliseno, Leonardo Salmena, Jiangwen Zhang, Brett Carver, William J. Haveman & Pier Paolo Pandolfi

Nature 465: 1033–1038, 24 June 2010.
doi:10.1038/nature09144

No formal write-up for this week, rather just some points to consider, raised during our journal club discussion:

The authors’ probing of expression levels in prostate cancer cells showed that PTENP1 was expressed at much lower levels, perhaps up to 100-fold less, than PTEN. If this is true, how can CMV driven overexpression of PTENP1 RNA come close to recapitulating the relative levels and biological interactions of these two transcripts in the cell? The abundance of each transcript will strongly influence their abilities to act as miRNA sponges for one another. This concern wasn’t really alleviated even when they looked at expression in normal human and prostate tissue samples.

Since their central argument was that PTENP1 acts as a sponge for miRNAs that can also bind PTEN, since many miRNA binding sites are present in both transcripts, they were remiss in not showing the effect of expressing the PTENP1 3’UTR with mutated miRNA binding sites. This is a crucial control. While they showed that there is a difference in expression when the sites are mutated, using luciferase reporter constructs, the difference was small for the number of sites they predict are targeted by various miRNAs.

They also observed PTENP1 overexpression reduced colony formation significantly more than repressing PTEN protein alone, indicating expression of PTENP1 is important for reasons other than regulating how miRNAs bind PTEN (perhaps also not surprising given the near perfect maintenance of a large block of nucleotide sequence between the gene and pseudogene, not just the miRNA binding sites). Together, the data don’t provide adequate support to the authors’ claim that PTENP1 is an endogenous miRNA sponge for PTEN.

Update 7/8/10: A quick search for this paper on the web revealed it is quite popular with the ID folk–they’re eating it up good! And then I found the press release from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, where Dr. Pandolfi says:

… not only have we discovered a new language for mRNA, but we have also translated the previously unknown language of up to 17,000 pseudogenes and at least 10,000 long non-coding (lnc) RNAs. Consequently, we now know the function of an estimated 30,000 new entities, offering a novel dimension by which cellular and tumor biology can be regulated, and effectively doubling the size of the functional genome.

Oh, well if you put it that way… now I see why it was in Nature.

Citation for researchblogging.org:

Poliseno L, Salmena L, Zhang J, Carver B, Haveman WJ, & Pandolfi PP (2010). A coding-independent function of gene and pseudogene mRNAs regulates tumour biology. Nature, 465 (7301), 1033-8 PMID: 20577206

Update 9/8/15:

The Reproducibility Project: Cancer Biology is attempting to reproduce some results central to this study. Godspeed to you!

http://elifesciences.org/content/4/e08245

RNA Journal Club 6/17/10

Posted in RNA Journal Club, RNAJC w/ review by YPAA on June 17, 2010

Mitotic cell-cycle progression is regulated by CPEB1 and CPEB4-dependent translational control

Isabel Novoa, Javier Gallego, Pedro G. Ferreira  &  Raul Mendez

Nature Cell Biology 12: 447 – 456, May 2010.
doi:10.1038/ncb2046

This week’s lucid summary and analysis by Noah Spies. This is Noah’s second contribution to the blog:

A normal eukaryotic messenger RNA is capped, spliced and polyadenylated within the nucleus in preparation for export into the wild world of the cytoplasm. Once in the cytoplasm, the translational machinery will recognize the cap and poly(A) tail and recruit ribosomes to translate the message until its eventual decapping/deadenylation and decay. In the late 1980s, it was discovered that many messages in Xenopus oocytes lay dormant in the cytoplasm until oocyte maturation or fertilization. These messages are recognized by a Cytoplasmic Polyadenylation Element (CPE) in their 3′ UTR by the CPE binding protein CPEB, and are deadenylated in the cytoplasm and stored in a translationally inert form until activation and re-adenylation at some later time point. Previous in vitro experiments suggested this system may activate some messages during the embryonic cell cycle, but there was little follow-up on these old results prior to this paper.

Novoa, et al (2010) used a differential elution system to purify mRNAs with short poly(A) tails (<30bp) and compared this pool to total mRNA (poly(A) tail length > 9bp) using microarrays. The authors isolated HeLa cells in S phase and compared these to cells in G2/M phases. The microarray experiment, largely validated by PCR (75% concordant results), showed several hundred genes whose poly(A) tails were either longer or shorter in G2/M than in S phase, and polysome profiling confirmed translational changes for a handful of these.

To connect these results to cytoplasmic polyadenylation, Novoa and colleagues showed the CPEB1 and CPEB4 were expressed in HeLa cells and CPEB1/2/4 were functional in an in vitro binding assay. Upon shRNA knock-down of CPEB1 and CPEB4, a number of genes showed differential polyadenylation profiles by microarray, hinting at a possible global role for CPEBs in regulating genes during the cell cycle. Experimental follow-up on one of these hits showed shRNA knock-down of CPEB lengthened the poly(A) tail of the Mnt mRNA, and this lengthening increased the protein levels. Other genes (e.g. CDKN3) showed similar effects.

If there are so many genes regulated by CPEB1/4 during the cell cycle, it should follow that there would be a significant phenotype following knock-down of these factors. Indeed, the authors found cell proliferation defects in both knock-downs, but not in a control knock-down. Much FACS analysis later, the authors conclude that CPEB knock-down results in a mitotic entry defect.

This work suggests that there is yet another layer of gene regulation operating during the cell cycle, and like any good research, raises more questions than it answers.

First, poly(A) tail lengths clearly change after CPEB knock-downs, but it remains an open question how many of these effects are direct. The authors attempted a cursory motif enrichment analysis, but by their own admission, this was limited in its scope by the loose definition of these elements. Differentially polyadenylated genes were enriched for a number of regulatory motifs (CPE, ARE, microRNA), suggesting that some of the changes might have been due to effects other than cytoplasmic polyadenyation. A simple follow-up would be to express a reporter containing a putative regulated 3′ UTR and follow poly(A) tail length after CPEB knock-down or after mutation of the CPE element. Further work might include immunoprecipitation of CPEB-bound RNAs at different cell cycle stages to confirm a direct interaction. And the motif work could be expanded upon with more specific control sets (e.g. only expressed genes) and with only microRNAs expressed in HeLa cells (it’s unclear how this was done).

Secondly, it is important to identify which CPEB interactions are important for the cell proliferation defect, as it is plausible that such an effect could result from shRNA off-target effects.

Finally, the CPEB1 knock-out mouse is viable, though sterile. If CPEB1 plays an important role during the cell cycle, this suggests that CPEB4 may be partially redundant with CPEB1. Seemingly inconsistent with this result, CPEB1 and CPEB4 knock-downs show only a small proportion of the same regulated genes.

Citation for Research Blogging:

Novoa I, Gallego J, Ferreira PG, & Mendez R (2010). Mitotic cell-cycle progression is regulated by CPEB1 and CPEB4-dependent translational control. Nature cell biology, 12 (5), 447-56 PMID: 20364142

RNA Journal Club 5/27/10

Posted in RNA Journal Club, RNAJC w/ review by YPAA on June 6, 2010

Most “Dark Matter” Transcripts Are Associated With Known Genes

Harm van Bakel, Corey Nislow, Benjamin J. Blencowe, Timothy R. Hughes

PLoS Biology, 8 (5): e1000371, 18 May 2010.
doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1000371

This week’s illuminating summary and analysis by Igor Ulitsky. It’s Igor’s second contribution to the blog:

The paper is one of at least five interesting RNA-Seq papers that came out in the past month or so (see also Guttman et al. and Trapnell et al. in the May issue of Nature Biotechnology, Kim et al. from Nature 465 (7295): 182-7 and De Santa et al. from the same issue of PLoS Biology). All these studies harness the awesome power of Illumina RNA-Seq to look at (mainly) the murine transcriptome and to try to figure out what it consists of, and how what RNA-Seq tells us differs from what we knew previously. Unfortunately, since the reads in those studies are still <75 long, RNA-Seq still can’t tell us exactly what the transcripts in the cell are, but rather what regions of the genome seem to give rise to RNA (or more precisely – which regions of the genome can we uniquely align reads to). This problem is partially alleviated by paired-end RNA-Seq used in the Nature Biotech papers, but it still has limited power for deciphering transcripts expressed at low levels. The five studies mentioned above tell three different stories about the transcriptome – the two Nature Biotech papers talk about how it is possible to identify thousands of novel exons in known genes, and also to give significantly more accurate exonic structures to some of the previously proposed long non-coding RNAs (lincRNAs). Kim et al. and De Santa et al. talk about a surprising amount of RNA coming from enhancer regions in the mouse genome, RNA whose exact function remains a mystery. The study we’re focusing on – van Bakel et al., tackles a more global question – how much of the polyA+ RNA comes from “known genes”, and how much from everything else – the “dark matter”. This question is naturally of high interest, but addressing it involves a wealth of caveats:

  • What are “known genes” (i.e., “non-dark matter”) – protein-coding ones? miRNAs? Coding and non-coding ones with known functions?
  • What expression levels can be considered functional? Are all transcripts with relatively low expression levels just noise?
  • Are short RNA-Seq reads really informative in terms of the number of different RNA species?
  • Are we confident enough in the annotation of the genome with pseudogenes and repeats, both of which can contribute to spurious mappings in intergenic regions?

Despite these caveats, van Bakel et al. do a thorough job of at least trying to answer this question, and do their best to convince the readers that, in fact, very little transcription from the mammalian genome is “dark matter”. When analyzing RNA-Seq data, the majority of the genome does not seem to give rise to detectable polyA+ RNA segments. Then how did ENCODE and related studies report as much as 80% of the genome as being transcribed? The authors begin by showing that tiling arrays are prone to give rise to many false positive calls. They do so by comparing their own tiling array data from human and mouse tissues to published and novel RNA-Seq datasets. Unfortunately, the sets are not completely matched (different labs/starting materials), but the data very convincingly shows that for transcripts with low expression data, the signal from tiling arrays is practically the same as the background – a fertile ground for false positive calls. It is interesting to note that the first part of the paper shows in fact that the data that the authors generated themselves (the tiling arrays) is worse than previously published data (RNA-Seq).

From that point on, the authors focus on RNA-Seq data. They find relatively few completely intergenic stand-alone transcripts that are not captured in some way in the “known genes” databases or at least in existing EST/mRNA collections. This is not very surprising given the effort involved in sequencing ESTs in mouse/human – it could hardly be expected that a lot of polyadenylated transcripts would be abundant in RNA-Seq, but missing from those datasets. It should be kept in mind though, that many of what the authors call “known genes” are in fact non-coding transcripts (based on lack of a long/conserved ORF) with completely unclear function. What about the sequence fragments (seqfrags) that do fall outside of the “known genes” boundaries? About 80% of those reads fall within 10kb of known genes and are likely to represent either unannotated parts of those genes, or transcripts whose biogenesis function is related to the gene adjacent to them, as their expression is generally highly correlated with their neighbors. What about the rest? Are there any interesting RNAs out there in the intergenic space? Well, there are some – the authors identify about 11,000-16,000 seqfrags that are located >10kb away from any known gene and that are significantly different from expected. The novel intergenic transcripts tend to overlap regions of open chromatin –identified using DNAse I hypersensitivity – which suggests that at least some of them could be the enhancer-associated transcripts reported in the parallel studies.

The authors then go on to show that by looking at splice junctions derived from the reads (using the popular TopHat tool) they can reach roughly the same conclusion – most of the spliced polyA+ RNA is already “known” to us. They can still identify about 5,000 novel exons in “known genes”, and those share the general characteristics of the known exons, albeit with lower expression and conservation levels. The imminent problem from this section, and from all the other recent RNA-Seq studies is this: Is anyone keeping track of all those new exons? Updating RefSeq/UCSC/Ensembl? How to update these databases is also an excellent question, as short-read-based studies cannot give us a complete (or close to complete) snapshot of the actual transcript. Anyhow, at this pace, we expect to see many additional papers re-discovering the same set of 5,000 novel exons.

The bottom line?

  1. The outback of the genome rarely gives rise to highly expressed and polyA+ transcripts. This does not mean that there is shortage of putative lincRNAs – hundreds of them are already in the “known genes” set, and others may be functional despite low expression levels/proximity to known genes. The jury is still out on the polyA-transcriptome.
  2. Annotation of the “canonical genes” in the mouse/human genomes is still not complete and both can be complemented with several thousand additional exons. Let’s hope somebody is keeping track.
  3. Many intergenic RNAs are likely to be enhancer-associated (but we still don’t understand why).

This paper (as well as the other recent RNA-Seq studies) was definitely interesting to read, and we can only look forward to what we will learn once long-read RNA-Seq (e.g., Pacific Biosciences) kicks in.

Citation for researchblogging.org:

van Bakel H, Nislow C, Blencowe BJ, & Hughes TR (2010). Most “dark matter” transcripts are associated with known genes. PLoS biology, 8 (5) PMID: 20502517

RNA JC posts shuffle

Posted in Blog Affairs, RNA Journal Club by YPAA on June 4, 2010

The RNA JC posts for the past month aren’t in chronological order right now. I’m reposting them to the top of the queue when I get summary and analysis to add, rather than burying them down chronologically where you might miss them, a practice I’ll adhere to from now on.

Please enjoy the three most recent write-ups by Pavan and Vikram (below), and Igor (above). They presented three high-impact papers that should be of great interest to you. Kudos to the presenters for setting aside time in their busy schedules to do write-ups.

RNA Journal Club 5/6/10

Posted in RNA Journal Club, RNAJC w/ review by YPAA on June 3, 2010

A dicer-independent miRNA biogenesis pathway that requires Ago catalysis

Sihem Cheloufi, Camila O. Dos Santos, Mark M. W. Chong  & Gregory J. Hannon

Nature, 465: 584–589, 3 June 2010.
Nature AOP, 27 April 2010.
doi:10.1038/nature09092

This week’s summary and ruminative analysis by Vikram Agarwal. It’s Vikram’s second contribution to the blog:

In this article, Cheloufi and colleagues demonstrate an alternative biogenesis pathway for the maturation of a microRNA. A key question that this study seeks to address is why a member of the Argonaute family of proteins has retained its catalytic activity throughout millions of years of mammalian evolution. Though a handful of examples are known of miRNA-mediated cleavage events in animals, none have been shown to be crucial for target gene regulation and cell viability. The evidence thus suggests the possibility that the catalytically active residues of Argonaute have been conserved for purposes that are distinct from target cleavage.

The authors initially explore the consequences of losing catalytic activity of Argonaute during early mouse embryogenesis. They find that Ago2 is expressed ubiquitously in the early mouse embryo and in nearby placental tissues. Mice with a mutated catalytic residue of Ago2 develop normally through embryogenesis, but exhibit an anemic phenotype and die shortly after birth. Further cell sorting experiments confirm a problem in the maturation of erythrocytes, leading to an accumulation of pro-erythroblasts prior to birth.

During a check of global miRNA expression patterns in wild type and mutant mice, the authors discover that a single miRNA, miR-451, is aberrantly expressed in catalytically deficient mice. This miRNA is already known to have important roles in erythrocyte differentiation. More interestingly, small RNAs mapping to its precursor do not correspond to a canonical pattern one would expect if the miRNA were processed by Dicer. The precursor lacks a detectable miR* fragment, and the 3′ end of the mature miRNA is derived from the loop of the hairpin rather than the stem. The processing of the precursor is biochemically shown to be Drosha, but not Dicer, dependent, when compared to canonical miRNAs such as miR-294 and miR-16. The concluding experiments of the work investigate the role of Argonaute in the processing of pre-miR-451. In vitro purified Ago2 is demonstrated to be sufficient to produce a mature miR-451 cut, although the cleavage product is nearly 8-10 bases longer than expected. Detection of shorter products in in vivo samples, along with untemplated U addition in the 3′ end, implicate the role of an unknown exonuclease in the ultimate maturation of miR-451 into its shorter, functional form.

Overall, the biochemical evidence presented in this study is compelling, and strongly supports a model in which the Piwi domain of Ago2 catalytically cleaves miR-451. A conclusion that is less clear, though presented as an underlying motivation for the study, is that this non-canonical processing pathway explains the retention of Ago2 catalytic activity. An experiment that would provide support to this hypothesis would be to see whether a miR-451 knock-out recapitulates a similar phenotype as a catalytically-deficient Ago2 mutant. At present, it is possible that the target cleavage ability of Argonaute, or a yet unknown mechanism requiring its catalytic potential, could explain the evolutionary pressure for its conservation. Intuitively, it is difficult to comprehend why this non-canonical pathway has been conserved for only a single miRNA out of the hundreds encoded in the genome. The time spans involved during the evolution of the precursor are so vast that there must have been at least some opportunity for small insertions to have converted the miRNA into one that is processed canonically, or produced a novel miRNA convergently with the same seed sequence. Only further work will help elucidate why such strong evolutionary pressure exists to preserve this non-canonical processing mechanism.

Citation for researchblogging.org:

Cheloufi S, Dos Santos CO, Chong MM, & Hannon GJ (2010). A dicer-independent miRNA biogenesis pathway that requires Ago catalysis. Nature PMID: 20424607

RNA Journal Club 6/3/10

Posted in RNA Journal Club by YPAA on June 3, 2010

Epigenetic silencing of tumour suppressor gene p15 by its antisense RNA

Wenqiang Yu, David Gius, Patrick Onyango, Kristi Muldoon-Jacobs, Judith Karp, Andrew P. Feinberg  &  Hengmi Cui

Nature 451: 202-206, 10 January 2008.
doi:10.1038/nature06468

RNA Journal Club 5/13/10

Posted in RNA Journal Club, RNAJC w/ review by YPAA on June 1, 2010

Cooperation Between Translating Ribosomes and RNA Polymerase in Transcription Elongation

Sergey Proshkin, A. Rachid Rahmouni, Alexander Mironov, Evgeny Nudler

Science, Vol. 328. no. 5977: pp. 504 – 508, 23 April 2010.
DOI: 10.1126/science.1184939

This week’s smart summary and analysis by Pavan Vaidyanathan:

In this paper, the authors propose a mechanism for active physical cooperation between an elongating RNA polymerase (RNAP) and a translating ribosome following the polymerase on the transcribed message.

It has been known for several decades that in prokaryotes the processes of transcription and translation are coupled and occur simultaneously. Ribosomes are loaded on to a message as it is getting transcribed by RNAP. This coupled process serves to maximize efficiency of protein synthesis and allows for rapid changes in gene expression. It is also well established that the coupling of translation to transcription can serve as a means of regulation of RNAP. For instance, if the rate of translation is not as high as the rate of transcription, the increasing distance between the ribosome and RNAP allows for the transcription terminator Rho to bind the message and cause RNAP dissociation from the message. Additionally, numerous amino acid biosynthesis operons are regulated by the mechanism of transcription attenuation in which the rate of translation determines the formation of secondary structure behind RNAP that either allows the continuation of transcription or terminates transcription. In this paper however, the authors propose a novel means of regulation of transcription that depends on a physical interaction between RNAP and the first trailing ribosome behind the polymerase.

The authors first showed that in vivo, the ratio of the rate of transcription (nt/sec) to the rate of translation (aa/sec) is consistently ~3.0 in a variety of environmental conditions and stages of growth. Based on this observation, the authors hypothesize that the rate of transcription in vivo is determined by the rate of translation. To test this, they determined the rate of transcription of a plasmid-derived lacZ message in cells grown in media containing low concentrations of ribosome-binding antibiotic (chloramphenicol). They observed that slowing down the ribosome also slowed down the rate of transcription. They confirmed this by testing the rate of transcription of various messages harboring increasing amounts of rare codons, which are expected to slow down translation. As expected, the rate of transcription was inversely proportional to the percentage of rare codons in the message.

RNAP, like other polymerases, is known to backtrack on a message quite frequently. However, the presence of multiple polymerases on the same message significantly decreased backtracking. The authors hypothesized that the ribosome could improve the efficiency of transcription by serving as a physical block to backtracking and ‘forcing’ the polymerase to go forward. In order to test their model, the authors developed an assay to monitor RNAP backtracking in vivo. The assay employed the single-stranded DNA binding probe, chloroacetaldehyde, to monitor the migration of the transcription bubble. They observed that when a single RNAP molecule was forced to encounter a roadblock (lac repressor bound to DNA), it paused and backtracked. However, when there were two RNAP elongation complexes transcribing the same message, this backtracking was reduced substantially. Similarly, the presence of a ribosome behind RNAP also significantly reduced the incidence of backtracking suggesting that the ribosome could improve transcription by preventing backtracking of the leading elongation complex (EC). Using a similar roadblock system, the authors additionally showed by Northern blot analysis of the transcribed mRNA that the leading EC could had much higher rates of readthrough of the roadblock when it was followed by a second EC or by a ribosome.

The authors conclude that the ribosome directly controls the rate of transcription by preventing RNAP backtracking. Because of this cooperation, the rate of transcription is determined by codon usage and nutrient availability as sensed by the ribosome thus allowing precise regulatory adjustment of transcription to translational needs.

Citation for researchblogging.org:

Proshkin S, Rahmouni AR, Mironov A, & Nudler E (2010). Cooperation between translating ribosomes and RNA polymerase in transcription elongation. Science, 328 (5977), 504-8 PMID: 20413502

RNA Journal Club 5/20/10

Posted in RNA Journal Club by YPAA on May 20, 2010

DNA Methylation Mediated by a MicroRNA Pathway

Liang Wu, Huanyu Zhou, Qingqing Zhang, Jianguang Zhang, Fangrui Ni, Chang Liu, and Yijun Qi

Molecular Cell, Volume 38: 465-475, 08 April 2010.
doi: 10.1016/j.molcel.2010.03.008

RNA Journal Club 4/22/10

Posted in RNA Journal Club by YPAA on April 22, 2010

Transcriptome-wide Identification of RNA-Binding Protein and MicroRNA Target Sites by PAR-CLIP

Markus Hafner, Markus Landthaler, Lukas Burger, Mohsen Khorshid, Jean Hausser, Philipp Berninger, Andrea Rothballer, Manuel Ascano, Jr., Anna-Carina Jungkamp, Mathias Munschauer, Alexander Ulrich, Greg S. Wardle, Scott Dewell, Mihaela Zavolan, and Thomas Tuschl

Cell 141, 129–141, 2 April 2010.
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2010.03.009

RNA Journal Club 4/15/10

Posted in RNA Journal Club by YPAA on April 15, 2010

A Splicing-Independent Function of SF2/ASF in MicroRNA Processing

Han Wu, Shuying Sun, Kang Tu, Yuan Gao, Bin Xie, Adrian R. Krainer, and Jun Zhu

Molecular Cell 38: 67–77, 9 April 2010.
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2010.02.021

RNA Journal Club 4/8/10

Posted in RNA Journal Club by YPAA on April 8, 2010

Differential regulation of microRNA stability

Sophie Bail, Mavis Swerdel, Hudan Liu, Xinfu Jiao, Loyal A. Goff, Ronald P. Hart and Megerditch Kiledjian

RNA, Advance Online Article, 26 March 2010.
doi: 10.1261/rna.1851510