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- Title
Principles of MicroRNA–Target Recognition.
- Authors
Brennecke, Julius; Stark, Alexander; Russell, Robert B; Cohen, Stephen M
- Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are short non-coding RNAs that regulate gene expression in plants and animals. Although their biological importance has become clear, how they recognize and regulate target genes remains less well understood. Here, we systematically evaluate the minimal requirements for functional miRNA–target duplexes in vivo and distinguish classes of target sites with different functional properties. Target sites can be grouped into two broad categories. 5′ dominant sites have sufficient complementarity to the miRNA 5′ end to function with little or no support from pairing to the miRNA 3′ end. Indeed, sites with 3′ pairing below the random noise level are functional given a strong 5′ end. In contrast, 3′ compensatory sites have insufficient 5′ pairing and require strong 3′ pairing for function. We present examples and genome-wide statistical support to show that both classes of sites are used in biologically relevant genes. We provide evidence that an average miRNA has approximately 100 target sites, indicating that miRNAs regulate a large fraction of protein-coding genes and that miRNA 3′ ends are key determinants of target specificity within miRNA families. MicroRNA target site recognition falls into two broad categories: 5' dominant sites that require little support from microRNA 3' end; and 3' compensatory sites that require strong 3' pairing to function.
- Subjects
NON-coding RNA; GENE expression; PLANT genes
- Publication
PLoS Biology, 2005, Vol 3, Issue 2, p1
- ISSN
1544-9173
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1371/journal.pbio.0030085