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Cytoplasmic control of sense-antisense mRNA pairs in Saccharomyces cerevisiae / Contrôle cytoplasmique des paires d'ARN messager sens-antisens chez Saccharomyces cerevisiaeNavickas, Albertas 23 September 2016 (has links)
Les récentes études transcriptomiques chez divers organismes ont montré que la transcription des gènes convergents peut produire des ARN messagers (ARNm) chevauchants. Ce phénomène a été analysé dans le contexte de l’interférence par ARN (ARNi) nucléaire, et peu d’information existe quant au destin cytoplasmique des messagers 3’ chevauchants ou leur impact sur l’expression des gènes. Dans ce travail, nous avons abordé les conséquences potentielles de l’interaction entre des paires d’ARNm sens-antisens chez Saccharomyces cerevisiae, un organisme modèle naturellement dépourvu de l’ARNi. Nous avons démontré que les extrémités 3’ complémentaires des ARNm peuvent interagir dans le cytoplasme et moduler la stabilité ainsi que la traduction d’ARNm. Nos résultats sont issus d’une étude détaillée d’une paire d’ARNm convergents, POR1 et OCA2, ensuite généralisée par l’approche de l’ARNi reconstituée chez S. cerevisiae. L’analyse globale a confirmé que dans les cellules sauvages, les paires d’ARNm sens-antisens forment des duplexes d’ARN in vivo et ont un rôle potentiel à moduler l’expression d’ARNm ou de protéines respectifs, dans des différentes conditions de croissance. Nous avons montré que le destin de centaines des messagers convergents est contrôlé par Xrn1, révélant l’importance de cette exoribonucléase 5’-3’ cytoplasmique très conservée dans la régulation post-transcriptionnelle des gènes convergents. Notre travail ouvre donc la perspective de considérer un nouveau mécanisme de l’interaction entre les paires d’ARNm sens-antisens dans le cytoplasme, chez les organismes contenant ou non la voie de l’interférence par ARN. / Recent transcriptome analyses have revealed that convergent gene transcription can produce many 3’ overlapping mRNAs in diverse organisms. This phenomenon has been studied in the context of nuclear RNA interference (RNAi) pathway, however little is known about the cytoplasmic fate of 3’ overlapping messengers or their impact on gene expression. In this work, we address the outcomes of interaction between sense-antisense mRNA pairs in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a model organism naturally devoid of RNAi. We demonstrate that the complementary tails of 3’ overlapping mRNAs can interact in the cytoplasm in a sequence-specific manner and promote post-transcriptional remodeling of mRNA stability and translation. Our findings are based on the detailed analysis of a convergent mRNA pair, POR1 and OCA2, subsequently generalized using the reconstituted RNAi approach in S. cerevisiae. Genome-wide experiments confirm that in wild-type cells, sense-antisense mRNA pairs form RNA duplexes in vivo and thus have potential roles in modulating the respective mRNA or protein levels under different growth conditions. We show that the fate of hundreds of messenger-interacting messengers is controlled by Xrn1, revealing the extent to which this conserved 5’-3’ cytoplasmic exoribonuclease plays an unexpected but key role in the post-transcriptional control of convergent gene expression. In sum, our work opens a perspective to consider an additional, cytoplasmic mechanism of interaction between sense-antisense mRNA pairs, in both RNAi-positive and negative organisms.
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mRNA Decay Pathways Use Translation Fidelity and Competing Decapping Complexes for Substrate SelectionCelik, Alper 15 May 2017 (has links)
mRNA decay is an important step in gene regulation, environmental responsiveness, and mRNA quality control. One such quality control pathway, Nonsense-mediated mRNA Decay (NMD), targets transcripts whose translation terminates prematurely. However, the scope and the defining features of NMD-targeted transcripts remain elusive. To address these issues, we re-evaluated the genome-wide expression of annotated transcripts in yeast cells harboring deletions of the UPF1, UPF2, or UPF3 genes. The vast majority of NMD-regulated transcripts are normal-looking protein-coding mRNAs. Our bioinformatics analyses reveal that this set of NMD-regulated transcripts generally have lower translational efficiency, lower average codon optimality scores, and higher ratios of out-of-frame translation.
General mRNA decay is predominantly mediated by decapping by the Dcp1-Dcp2 complex and 5' to 3' decay by Xrn1, but the exact mechanism of decapping regulation has remained largely unknown. Several in vitro and in vivo studies have revealed the importance of the C-terminal extension of Dcp2 and the identities of many decapping regulators that interact with the decapping complex. To better understand how decapping regulation is achieved by the C-terminal extension of Dcp2 we generated RNA-Seq libraries from a Dcp2 allele that lacks this portion of Dcp2 along with libraries from strains that contain single deletions of several decapping activators. Our transcriptome-wide results indicate that the C-terminal extension of Dcp2 is crucial for efficient regulation of decapping, and different decapping activators are responsible for targeting different sets of mRNAs. Considering the limited pool of Dcp1-Dcp2 in the cell decapping activators might be in competition for decapping complex binding.
Collectively, our results yield valuable insights into the mechanism of substrate selection for mRNA quality control and decay in yeast.
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A Genome-wide Analysis to Identify and Characterize Novel Genes Involved in tRNA Biology in Saccharomyces cerevisiaeWu, Jingyan 26 May 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Exploiting and exploring the interactions between microRNA-122 and Hepatitis C virus2014 September 1900 (has links)
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a single-stranded plus-sense RNA virus that is transmitted by blood-to-blood contact, and infects the human liver. HCV has a unique dependence on the liver-specific microRNA miR-122, where miR-122 binds the 5´ un-translated region of the viral RNA at two tandem sites and increases viral RNA abundance. The mechanisms of augmentation are not yet fully understood, but the interaction is known to stabilize the viral RNA, increase translation from the viral internal ribosomal entry site (IRES), and result in increased viral yield.
In an attempt to create a small animal model for HCV, we added miR-122 to mouse cell lines previously thought non-permissive to HCV, which rendered these cells permissive to the virus, additionally showing that miR-122 is one of the major determinants of HCV hepatotropism. We found that some wild-type and knockout mouse cell lines – NCoA6 and PKR knockout embryonic fibroblasts – could be rendered permissive to transient HCV sub-genomic, but not full-length, RNA replication upon addition of miR-122, and that other wild-type and knockout cell lines cannot be rendered permissive to HCV replication by addition of miR-122. These knockout cell lines demonstrated varying permissiveness phenotypes between passages and isolates and eventually completely lost permissiveness, and we were unable to achieve sub-genomic RNA replication in PKR knockout primary hepatocytes. Knockdown of NCoA6 and PKR in Huh7.5 cells did not substantially impact sub-genomic replication, leading us to conclude that there are additional factors within the cell lines that affect their permissiveness for HCV replication such as epigenetic regulation during passage or transformation and immortalization.
We also added miR-122 to Hep3B cells, a human hepatoma cell line lacking expression of miR-122 and previously thought to be non-permissive to HCV replication. Added miR-122 rendered the cells as highly permissive to HCV replication as the Huh7-derived cell lines commonly used to study the virus. In these cells, we were also able to observe miR-122-independent replication of sub-genomic HCV RNA. This was verified by use of a miR-122 antagonist that had no impact on the putative miR-122-independent replication, and by mutating the miR-122 binding sites to make them dependent on a single nucleotide-substituted microRNA. This replication in the absence of miR-122 was not detected in full-length HCV RNA, but was detectable using a bi-cistronic full-length genomic replicon, suggesting that the addition of a second IRES in sub-genomic and full-genomic replicons altered replication dynamics enough to allow detectable RNA replication without miR-122 binding.
Because miR-122 has been implicated in protecting the viral RNA from destabilization and degradation by Xrn1, the main cytoplasmic 5´ to 3´ RNA exonuclease, we employed our miR-122-independent system to test this miR-122-mediated protection. We verified that miR-122 functions to protect the viral RNA from Xrn1, but this was insufficient to account for the overall impact of miR-122 on replication, meaning that miR-122 has further functions in the virus’ life cycle. We showed that the effect of miR-122 on translation is due to stabilization of the RNA by protecting it from Xrn1, through binding at both sites. We further evaluated the role of each miR-122 binding site (S1 and S2) in the virus life cycle, and found that binding at each site contributes equally to increasing viral RNA replication, while binding at both sites exerts a co-operative effect. Finally, we determined that binding of miR-122 at site S2 is more important for protection from Xrn1, suggesting that miR-122 binding at S1 is more important for the additional functions of miR-122 in enhancing HCV RNA accumulation.
Altogether, we have shown that miR-122 is partially responsible for the hepatotropic nature of Hepatitis C virus, and that supplementation with this microRNA can render non-permissive cells permissive to viral replication. We have also identified and confirmed replication of both sub-genomic and full-length HCV RNA in the absence of miR-122. Finally, we have characterized the impact of the host RNA exonuclease Xrn1 on the HCV life cycle, and determined the roles of each miR-122 binding site in shielding the viral RNA from this host restriction factor.
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BIOGENESIS AND FUNCTIONAL APPLICATIONS OF PIWI INTERACTING RNAs (piRNAs)Balaratnam, Sumirtha 25 July 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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