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Translation is required for miRNA-dependent decay of endogenous transcripts.

Adriano BiasiniBaroj AbdulkarimStefano de PretisJennifer Yihong TanRajika AroraHarry WischnewskiRene DreosMattia PelizzolaConstance CiaudoAna Claudia Marques
Published in: The EMBO journal (2020)
Post-transcriptional repression of gene expression by miRNAs occurs through transcript destabilization or translation inhibition. mRNA decay is known to account for most miRNA-dependent repression. However, because transcript decay occurs co-translationally, whether target translation is a requirement for miRNA-dependent transcript destabilization remains unknown. To decouple these two molecular processes, we used cytosolic long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) as models for endogenous transcripts that are not translated. We show that, despite interacting with the miRNA-loaded RNA-induced silencing complex, the steady-state abundance and decay rates of these transcripts are minimally affected by miRNA loss. To further validate the apparent requirement of translation for miRNA-dependent decay, we fused two lncRNA candidates to the 3'-end of a protein-coding gene reporter and found this results in their miRNA-dependent destabilization. Further analysis revealed that the few natural lncRNAs whose levels are regulated by miRNAs in mESCs tend to associate with translating ribosomes, and possibly represent misannotated micropeptides, further substantiating the necessity of target translation for miRNA-dependent transcript decay. In summary, our analyses suggest that translation is required for miRNA-dependent transcript destabilization, and demonstrate that the levels of coding and noncoding transcripts are differently affected by miRNAs.
Keyphrases
  • gene expression
  • magnetic resonance
  • dna methylation
  • computed tomography
  • small molecule
  • crispr cas
  • copy number
  • genome wide
  • heat shock protein
  • long noncoding rna