The subcellular distribution of miRNA isoforms, tRNA-derived fragments, and rRNA-derived fragments depends on nucleotide sequence and cell type.
Tess CherlinYi JingSiddhartha ShahAnne KennedyAristeidis G TelonisVenetia PliatsikaHaley WilsonLily ThompsonPanagiotis I VlantisPhillipe LoherBenjamin LeibyIsidore RigoutsosPublished in: BMC biology (2024)
SncRNAs with similar sequences have different subcellular distributions within and across cell lines, suggesting that each isoform could have a different function. Future computational and experimental studies of isomiRs, tRFs, and rRFs will need to distinguish among each molecule's various isoforms and account for differences in each isoform's subcellular distribution in the cell line at hand. While the findings add to a growing body of evidence that isomiRs, tRFs, rRFs, tRNAs, and rRNAs follow complex intracellular trafficking rules, further investigation is needed to exclude alternative explanations for the observed subcellular distribution of sncRNAs.
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