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Vous êtes ici : Accueil / Équipes / Complexité, plasticité et rôles des miARNs - K. Jouravleva / Publications / Terminal modification, sequence, length, and PIWI-protein identity determine piRNA stability

Terminal modification, sequence, length, and PIWI-protein identity determine piRNA stability

I. Gainetdinov, C. Colpan, K. Cecchini, A. Arif, K. Jouravleva, P. Albosta, J. Vega-Badillo, Y. Lee, D. M Ozata, and P. D Zamore (2021)

Mol Cell, 81(23):4826–4842.

In animals, PIWI-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) silence transposons, fight viral infections, and regulate gene expression. piRNA biogenesis concludes with 3' terminal trimming and 2'-O-methylation. Both trimming and methylation influence piRNA stability. Our biochemical data show that multiple mechanisms destabilize unmethylated mouse piRNAs, depending on whether the piRNA 5' or 3' sequence is complementary to a trigger RNA. Unlike target-directed degradation of microRNAs, complementarity-dependent destabilization of piRNAs in mice and flies is blocked by 3' terminal 2'-O-methylation and does not require base pairing to both the piRNA seed and the 3' sequence. In flies, 2'-O-methylation also protects small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) from complementarity-dependent destruction. By contrast, pre-piRNA trimming protects mouse piRNAs from a degradation pathway unaffected by trigger complementarity. In testis lysate and in vivo, internal or 3' terminal uridine- or guanine-rich tracts accelerate pre-piRNA decay. Loss of both trimming and 2'-O-methylation causes the mouse piRNA pathway to collapse, demonstrating that these modifications collaborate to stabilize piRNAs.

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