Download ncrna

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
ncRNAs
What Genomes are Telling Us
ncrna.ppt
ncRNA genes are difficult to discover!

small




no ORFs and no polyadenylation
must be identified by paralogy/orthology
novel members not readily discovered from sequence



Draft or complete; no structural information; underrepresentation
draft sequence biased against tandem ncRNA gene units


an annotational and statistical concern
“low complexity” BACs not sequenced for draft
many pseudogenes and retropseudogenes
difficult to distinguish gene from pseudogene

except tRNA genes
The ncRNAs We Know and Love
•snRNAs
•snoRNAs
•rRNAs
•Telomerase RNA
•tRNAs
•Xist RNA
•Snurp RNAs
•Vault RNA
•7SL RNA
•miRNAs
Transfer RNAs (tRNAs)



About 500 genes, about 300 pseudogenes
Included tRNASeCys-UGA
Fly < Humans < Worm


Related to developmental and tissue-specific needs, not
organismal complexity
tRNAaa gene number roughly correlates with
aa frequency and codon bias
Genomic distribution of tRNA genes
in human


Nonrandom dispersal (clustering)
25% (140) located in 4 Mb of HSA6






0.1% of genome has near complete set of anticodons
18 of 30 tRNAcys genes located in 0.5MB of HSA7
Many tRNAarg and tRNAglu are loosely clustered on
HSA1
Over 50% (280) genes located on HSA1&6
HSA3,4,8,9,10,12,18,20,21 and X have <10 tRNA
genes each
HSA22 and Y have one pseudogene each and no
genes
Ribosomal RNAs (rRNAs)

Four RNA molecules for each of two ribosome
subunits




LSU and SSU rRNA genes occur as 44kb tandem
repeat unit


LSU rRNA = 28S, 5.8S
SSU rRNA = 18S
5S rRNA (also part of LSU but from separate gene)
150-200 copies on the short arms of acrocentric chromosomes 13,
14, 15, 21, 22
5S rRNA gene occurs in several 200-300-unit tandem
arrays


Largest at 1q41.11-1q42.13
2000 copies predicted; 520 pseudogenes likely
LSU-SSU rRNA
gene repeat:
150-200 copies on
HSA 13p, 14p, 15p,
21p, 22p
Small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs)


direct postranscriptional modification and processing
of rRNAs in nucleolus
Two families of snoRNA genes



97 snoRNA genes



C/D-Box snoRNAs direct 2’-O-ribose methylations (105-107
instances)
H/ACA-Box snoRNAs direct pseudouridylation (95 instances)
Distributed across chromosomes as nearly all single copies
5-10 copies of CD-Box snoRNA gene inverted repeats at 17q21
More predicted

Sequences diverse; cannot depend on paralogy to predict
Spliceosomal snRNAs (snurps)


Ten known RNAs (U1-U12) responsible for hnRNA
splicing
Snurp RNAs either clustered or dispersed:





44 dispersed genes for U6 RNA
16 dispersed genes for U1 RNA
10-20 tandem copies U2 RNA genes (6.1 kb units) at 17q21
30 copy loose cluster of U1 RNA genes at 1p36
More predicted

Tandem-arrayed clusters underrepresented in draft
ncRNA pseuodgenes


100’s-1000’s of pseudogene copies of ncRNA genes
More copies from ncRNAs transcribed by RNA
polymerase III


Most presumed to have arisen by reverse
transcription and retroposition


Including snurp U6, 7 SL RNA, and hY RNA
Like Alu and tRNA-family repeats
Analytical comparison with Alus may help explain
requirements for SINE proliferation in genomes
Dude!
Small interfering RNAs (siRNAs)




siRNA-containing transcripts exhibit extensive
folding
dsRNA folds recognized by DICER enzyme
siRNA molecules excised from folds in nucleus or
cytoplasm
snRNA perform multiple functions



Directed degredation of specific mRNAs
Maintenance of heterochromatin
Analogous to RNAi experiments, but siRNA is
endogenous
RISC
RNA
induced
silencing
complex
microRNAs (miRNAs)

~21 nts long


miRNAs derive from 60-80 nt dsRNA hairpins





Hairpins excised from primaries in nucleus
Some transcripts have exon-intron structure
 miRNAs can derive from instron or exon sequence
Some transcripts contain clusters of miRNAs
Conserved sequence



miRNAs excised from hairpins in cytoplasm
Excised by DICER
Hairpins derive from long primary transcripts


“mature” miRNA
50% have Fugu and Danio homologues
25% have C. elegans homologues
Primary function believed to be translational suppression



Binds to target mRNAs at 3’ ends
Suppresses, slows, or eliminates specific protein synthesis
Some act as siRNAs
A Few Parting Words on cRNAs and their Genes
Related documents