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Post-transcriptional 3´-UTR cleavage of mRNA transcripts generates thousands of stable uncapped autonomous RNA fragments.

Yuval MalkaAvital Steiman-ShimonyEran RosenthalLiron ArgamanLeonor Cohen-DanielEliran ArbibHanah MargalitTommy KaplanMichael Berger
Published in: Nature communications (2017)
The majority of mammalian genes contain one or more alternative polyadenylation sites. Choice of polyadenylation sites was suggested as one of the underlying mechanisms for generating longer/shorter transcript isoforms. Here, we demonstrate that mature mRNA transcripts can undergo additional cleavage and polyadenylation at a proximal internal site in the 3'-UTR, resulting in two stable, autonomous, RNA fragments: a coding sequence with a shorter 3'-UTR (body) and an uncapped 3'-UTR sequence downstream of the cleavage point (tail). Analyses of the human transcriptome has revealed thousands of such cleavage positions, suggesting a widespread post-transcriptional phenomenon producing thousands of stable 3'-UTR RNA tails that exist alongside their transcripts of origin. By analyzing the impact of microRNAs, we observed a significantly stronger effect for microRNA regulation at the body compared to the tail fragments. Our findings open a variety of future research prospects and call for a new perspective on 3'-UTR-dependent gene regulation.
Keyphrases
  • dna binding
  • gene expression
  • transcription factor
  • endothelial cells
  • genome wide
  • single cell
  • current status
  • rna seq
  • heat shock
  • induced pluripotent stem cells
  • decision making
  • heat shock protein
  • genome wide analysis