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MEETING REPORT |
1 Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA
2 Department of Biology and the Huck Institute for the Life Sciences, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA
3 Integrative Biosciences Graduate Degree Program, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA
4 Department of Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA
| INTRODUCTION |
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| MECHANISMS AND MAJOR PATHWAYS OF SMALL RNAS |
|---|
miRNAs are sRNAs that often direct silencing of target mRNA(s), which are distinct from the miRNA locus itself (Jones-Rhoades et al. 2006
). The transcription product of a miRNA gene, called the pri-miRNA (Xie et al. 2005
), contains an imperfect inverted repeat sequence that is separated by a span of RNA that allows the strand to fold back on itself and form a stemloop structure. The pri-miRNA is cleaved on either side of the miRNA sequence by the enzyme Dicer (DCL1 in Arabidopsis) forming what is called the miRNAmiRNA* duplex (Park et al. 2002
; Reinhart et al. 2002
; Lim et al. 2003
; Kurihara and Watanabe 2004
; Jones-Rhoades et al. 2006
). In addition to DCL1, the Arabidopsis HYPONASTIC LEAVES1 (HYL1) RNA-binding protein, the identification and characterization of which Nina Fedoroff (Penn State University) described at the meeting, is required for the cleavage of pri-miRNA and DCL1 and HYL1 likely function together in this process (Lu and Fedoroff 2000
; Jones-Rhoades et al. 2006
). Hai Huang (SIPPE, Shanghai, and Joint Center of Penn State-SIPPE-SJITU) discussed the involvement of SERRATE (SE), an Arabidopsis C2H2 zinc-finger protein (Grigg et al. 2005
), in this process (Yang et al. 2006b
). SE and HYL1 are localized to the nucleus and were shown to physically interact via a yeast two-hybrid experiment as well as a glutathione S-transferase (GST) pull-down assay. Thus, DCL1, HYL1, and SE appear to all function together in pri-miRNA cleavage. After cleavage, the miRNAmiRNA* duplex is methylated on the 2' hydroxyl group of the 3' terminal nucleotides. This methylation requires the Arabidopsis HUA ENHANCER1 (HEN1) gene encoding a methyl transferase that can methylate the miRNAmiRNA* duplexes in vitro (Ebhardt et al. 2005
; Yu et al. 2005a
; Li et al. 2005b
). The methylation of the miRNAmiRNA* duplex appears to stabilize the miRNA by protecting it from 3' uridylation, as hen1 mutations result in increased 3' uridylation and reduced miRNA accumulation (Park et al. 2002
; Boutet et al. 2003
; Li et al. 2005b
).
After cleavage and methylation, miRNAs are generally exported from the nucleus into the cytoplasm (Jones-Rhoades et al. 2006
). In plants, miRNA may be exported from the nucleus as miRNAmiRNA* duplexes, or as single-stranded miRNA, potentially associated with members of the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) (Jones-Rhoades et al. 2006
). Regardless of the location, the miRNA strand is preferentially loaded into the silencing complex, protecting it from degradation, while the miRNA* strand is degraded (Reinhart et al. 2002
; Jones-Rhoades et al. 2006
). The key component of the miRNA RISC in Arabidopsis is ARGONAUTE1 (AGO1). Many Argonaute proteins contain both an RNA-binding and an RNA-cleavage domain (Carmell et al. 2002
; Lingel et al. 2003
; Song et al. 2003
, 2004
; Yan et al. 2003
; Liu et al. 2004
; Roth et al. 2004
). A major difference between plants and animals is that in plants the miRNA loaded into the RISC directs cleavage of complementary (target) mRNA strands by AGO1. After cleavage, the mRNA is released and another target mRNA can be loaded onto RISC for cleavage.
Joe Ecker (Salk Institute) observed that
10,000 genes in Arabidopsis are methylated. Among these genes, about 10% are methylated in the promoter region in a tissue-specific manner. Interestingly, pseudogenes are highly methylated, and their promoter and coding regions tend to be equally methylated. There is also a strong correlation between methylation and heterochromatic regions. Another interesting observation is that 99% of known siRNA clusters are methylated.
The RNAi pathway is used to regulate gene expression and to defend against viral attack. This complex pathway targets long double-stranded RNA and viral RNAs for destruction. The double-stranded RNA is recognized by one of the DCL protein complexes and is cleaved into 2124 nt pieces of double-stranded RNA. These siRNAs can then be used for short- or long-distance signaling. Some siRNAs can continue on to join the RISC to cleave target RNAs and stop expression of the target gene.
Peter Waterhouse (CSIRO, Canberra, Australia) discussed differences between the DCL proteins across plant species. Where it is known, dicots have at least four DCL proteins (Arabidopsis has four, poplar has five) and monocots have at least five DCLs (maize and wheat have five, while rice has six). This suggests that plants require a minimum of four DCL proteins, and that after the monocotdicot split, the monocots acquired at least one additional DCL gene (Margis et al. 2006
).
James Carrington (Oregon State) talked about the roles of DCL4 and DCL2 in viral defense. DCL4 plays a major role in producing sRNAs that comprise part of the antiviral RISC and help to silence genes post-transcriptionally. DCL2 produces nat-siRNAs, which are required for sense transgene RNA silencing in viral defense. Vicki Vance (University of South Carolina) also discussed the roles of DCL2 and DCL4 in viral defense. Vance has shown that DCL3 is not needed for silencing of endogenous genes by geminivirus-mediated VIGS (DNA-VIGS); however, Niki Robertson (North Carolina State University) suggested that DCL3 may play a role in the silencing of DNA geminiviruses with DCL2 and DCL4. Robertson also described several differences in DNA VIGS response for different ecotypes of Arabidopsis. These differences indicate that the pathways for RNA silencing and viral response may be more variable than previously thought. Carrington also reported the roles of two other proteins in viral silencing responses, RDR6 and RDR1, which aid in antiviral immunity by making dsRNA from single-stranded viral templates (Deleris et al. 2006
).
The mechanism of gene silencing by hairpin RNAs (hpRNAs) was detailed by Peter Waterhouse. An interesting feature of gene silencing in plants is that it does not seem to be temporally self-perpetuating without active transcription of the silencing RNA. This property allows the use of specific/inducible promoters to transiently knock down gene expression. In addition, grafting experiments in tobacco showed that systemic long-distance silencing is triggered by hpRNAs, comparable to viral RNA-induced silencing. Studies of Arabidopsis dcl single and double mutants showed that both hpRNA silencing and virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) involve DCL2, DCL3, and DCL4, particularly DCL2 and DCL4. These results suggest that hpRNAi operates through the VIGS pathway. This hypothesis is further supported by the suppression of hpRNA-mediated RNAi by HC-Pro, a viral protein that suppresses the VIGS pathway in plants (Anandalakshmi et al. 1998
). VIGS is an efficient technique used to mimic a loss-of-function mutation without stable transformation. Savithramma Dinesh-Kumar (Yale University) presented intriguing applications of this strategy in studying plant development, viral movement, and plant disease resistance.
| SMALL RNAS ARE KEY REGULATORS OF PLANT DEVELOPMENT |
|---|
Kathy Barton (Carnegie Institution of Washington, Stanford) and Hai Huang discussed the role of miRNA and post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS) in regulating leaf polarity and development. miR165/166 are complimentary to a portion of the region encoding the START domain of REV, PHB, and PHV and can cause the cleavage of PHB and PHV mRNA in vitro (Emery et al. 2003
; Tang et al. 2003
; Zhong and Ye 2004
; Mallory et al. 2004
). Mutations in a miRNA-binding site, which do not alter the amino acid sequence coded by the REV, PHB, or PHV genes, cause expansion of their expression to the abaxial region, leading to adaxialization of leaves and other organs (Emery et al. 2003
; Mallory et al. 2004
). In addition, promoterGUS fusions showed polar expression of PHB in the adaxial leaf domain, indicating that mir165/166 represses PHB throughout the developing leaf, and not just in the abaxial domain (Bao et al. 2004
). Interestingly, Barton also reported that in the phb-d mutant, regions of the PHB gene had reduced cytosine methylation, suggesting the possibility of miRNA-directed DNA modification (Bao et al. 2004
).
Recent work from Hai Huang's laboratory has revealed a role for RDR6 in leaf development. RDR6 was known previously to be involved in PTGS (Dalmay et al. 2000
; Mourrain et al. 2000
), and to be important for vegetative phase change (Peragine et al. 2004
). This laboratory earlier identified ASYMETRIC LEAVES1 and 2 (AS1 and AS2), two genes whose products interact together and play a role in the adaxialabaxial polarity formation (Xu et al. 2003
). Disruption of the RDR6 gene in the as2 mutant background causes severely enhanced developmental defects, including higher frequencies of abaxialized leaves (Li et al. 2005a
). This correlated with a decrease in PHB and REV expression, expanded FIL expression, and an increase in miR165/166 levels. Thus, the AS1AS2 pathway and the RDR6 pathway both repress MIR165/166. In the absence of the AS1AS2 and RDR6 pathways, abnormally high levels of miR165/166 repress expression of the adaxial-promoting factors, leading to abaxialized leaves. However, additional work with ago1 mutants revealed that miR165/166 are not the only determinants of leaf polarity (Yang et al. 2006a
). Furthermore, more recent work has shown that RDR6, SGS3, and AGO7 function in the same pathway to direct leaf polarity (Adenot et al. 2006
; Fahlgren et al. 2006
; Garcia et al. 2006
; Xu et al. 2006
).
Isabel Bäurle from Caroline Dean's laboratory (John Innes Center, UK) and Josef Kuhn from Julian Schroeder's laboratory (UC San Diego) discussed examples of how different genes involved in RNA processing affect flowering time. The transition from vegetative growth to flowering is governed by environmental conditions, particularly day length and extended periods of low temperature. A central figure in this pathway is FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC), which encodes a MADS-domain transcription factor that acts as the main repressor of flowering (Michaels and Amasino 1999
; Simpson and Dean 2002
). FLC is regulated by many factors; Isabel Bäurle and Josef Kuhn discussed those that post-transcriptionally regulate FLC expression: ABA HPYERSENSITIVE1 (ABH1), FCA, and FY (Macknight et al. 1997
; Simpson et al. 2003
; Bezerra et al. 2004
).
ABH1 encodes the large subunit of an Arabidopsis nuclear mRNA cap binding protein (CBP80) (Hugouvieux et al. 2001
). In the abh1 mutant, FLC and FLOWERING LOCUS M (FLM) expression are decreased. abh1 specifically affects intron 1-dependent splicing of downstream introns in FLC pre-mRNAs and also reveals differential premature polyadenylation within intron 1 of FLM transcripts compared to wild type. The reduction of both FLC and FLM transcript levels provides a basis for early flowering in abh1. In addition to regulating FLC and FLM expression, Kuhn reported that ABH1 also affects CONSTANS (CO) expression. CO is a pivotal regulator in the photoperiodic pathway that promotes flowering, and CO transcripts are affected in abh1 (J. Kuhn and J. Schroeder, unpubl.).
FCA encodes an RNA-recognition motif (RRM) nuclear RNA-binding protein that is also involved in pre-mRNA processing (Macknight et al. 1997
; Macknight et al. 2002
). FY is an RNA 3'-end processing factor that interacts with FCA (Quesada et al. 2003
; Simpson et al. 2003
). Bäurle reported that together FCA and FY cause silencing of FLC via the siRNA pathway. Interestingly, FCA itself is also regulated post-transcriptionally through alternative splicing and polyadenylation of its introns (Macknight et al. 1997
; Macknight et al. 2002
; Quesada et al. 2003
). Of the four FCA transcripts produced,
,
,
, and
, only the
form is functional. Together with FY, FCA regulates RNA processing of its own pre-mRNA via polyadenylation and thereby negatively regulates its own expression (Quesada et al. 2003
; Simpson et al. 2003
). FY likely has other essential functions beyond controlling flowering time as a null fy mutant is embryo lethal (Henderson et al. 2005
).
In addition of exploring the role of RNA processing in flowering time, the role of small RNAs in flower organ development was also discussed. Flowers typically have four types of organs: sepals (outer covering), petals (attractive to insects), stamens (male), and carpels (female). The classic ABC model for determining floral organ identifies states that the A function promotes the identity of sepals, combined A and B functions specify petals, combined B and C functions designate the stamens, and the C function directs the carpel identity (Coen and Meyerowitz 1991
; Weigel and Meyerowitz 1994
; Ma 2005
). Disruption of the ABC genes causes homeotic mutations. For example, disruption of the Arabidopsis C function gene AGAMOUS (AG) results in flowers with alternating whorls of sepals and petals, but no reproductive organs, namely the stamens and carpels (Yanofsky et al. 1990
). This is partly due to the mutually repressive nature of the A and C function genes (Drews et al. 1991
). AG represses expression of the A function gene APETELA1 (AP1), while AP2 negatively regulates AG expression. The HUA and HUA ENHANCER (HEN) genes contribute to the C function in flower development (Chen and Meyerowitz 1999
; Chen et al. 2002
; Western et al. 2002
). Several HUA and HEN genes code for proteins that may be involved in RNA processing (Cheng et al. 2003
).
Xuemei Chen (UC Riverside) discussed elegant research from her laboratory and others laboratories that is beginning to uncover how the miRNA pathway is involved in floral organ identity determination and in controlling floral organ number. Disruption of either HEN1 or DCL1 results in stamen-to-petal transformation along with a decrease in miRNA abundance, indicating that miRNAs negatively regulate A function genes (Chen et al. 2002
; Park et al. 2002
). As discussed earlier, HEN1 is a sequence-nonspecific sRNA methyltransferase that is required for the maturation of miRNAs, including miR172 (Chen 2004
). Plants expressing MIR172 driven by the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter produce flowers phenotypically similar to those of the ap2 mutant. In addition, AP2 mRNA contains a miR172 target site that when mutated (AP2m3) results in flowers with multiple whorls of stamens. Together these data indicate that miR172 is a negative regulator of AP2. In addition, the extra stamen phenotype seen in AP2m3 plants implies that AP2 positively regulates stem cell propagation. WUSCHEL (WUS) is a positive regulator of stem cell proliferation, and in the wus mutant background the extra stamen phenotype of the AP2m3 plants was no longer observed (Wurschum et al. 2006
). Further work showed that AP2 is a positive regulator of WUS, thereby promoting stem cell proliferation and floral organ number. miR172 also restricts the expression of both AP3 and PI (B function genes), while AP2 is a positive regulator of their expression.
| SMALL RNAS ARE INVOLVED IN PLANT STRESS RESPONSES |
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A compelling example of the role of sRNAs in abiotic stress response was presented by Jian-Kang Zhu (University of California, Riverside), whose laboratory investigates a class of nat-siRNAs (Borsani et al. 2005
). Zhu discussed the role of two genes in salt stress, P5CDH and SRO5. In response to salt stress, SRO5 gene expression is induced while P5CDH expression decreases. P5CDH encodes a
1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase enzyme that catabolizes
1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate (P5C). This reaction is part of proline catabolism, and a decrease in P5CDH levels is then expected to lead to an accumulation of both proline and P5C. While proline accumulation is a beneficial component of plant salt stress response, accumulation of P5C is toxic (Hellmann et al. 2000
; Deuschle et al. 2004
), possibly by increasing the production of ROS. SRO5 encodes a mitochondrial protein (Borsani et al. 2005
) hypothesized to counteract the side effects of ROS accumulation. SRO5 and P5CDH genes overlap on opposing DNA strands and can produce convergent transcripts whose last 760 nt (before the polyA cleavage site) constitute natural antisense strands. The striking point is that 24- and 21-nt siRNAs that match this region have been cloned from salt-stressed plants (Sunkar and Zhu 2004
; Borsani et al. 2005
). By monitoring the levels of these nat-siRNAs in many siRNA biogenesis pathway mutants, Borsani et al. (2005)
proposed a model for the regulation of P5CDH in response to salt stress with the following steps: (1) the expression of SRO5; (2) the formation of a dsRNA by annealing of the two corresponding natural antisense transcripts between SRO5 and P5CDH; (3) from the dsRNA, a 24-nt nat-siRNA is generated via a DCL2-dependent process; (4) this 24-nt nat-siRNAs guides the additional phased and DCL1-dependent cleavages of the dsRNA into 21-nt nat-siRNAs; and (5) the different nat-siRNAs generated then target the P5CDH transcripts for degradation.
According to sequence analysis, about 10% of the genes in the Arabidopsis genome are overlapping, and >20% in the human and fly genomes overlap. Hence, there is an important potential for gene expression regulation through nat-siRNA pathways. Zhu reported that 24-nt nat-siRNAs have been observed for several pairs of overlapping genes, whose roles in stress response are hypothesized to be antagonistic. The high rates of gene overlap in genomes in which genome size does not seem to be a constraint for such arrangements is all the more intriguing.
Involvement of mRNA processing factors in responses to stresses was also highlighted through studies of the polyadenylation/splicing factor AtCPSF30, and the RNA-binding protein SCI2. Q. Quinn Li (Miami University, Ohio) studies AtCPSF30, which appears to be involved in the response to oxidative stress. A mutant deficient in this factor, named oxt6, has an increased tolerance to oxidative stress and an altered mRNA accumulation profile. Some of the affected mRNAs correspond to oxidative defense genes. AtCPSF30 was shown to be a nuclear RNA-binding protein capable of homodimerization in vitro (Delaney et al. 2006
). Interestingly, the RNA-binding activity of AtCPSF30 is inhibited by the binding of calmodulin (Delaney et al. 2006
).
Several plant stressresponse pathways are mediated by the plant hormone jasmonate. Jasmonate is an important hormone in plant responses to wounding, drought, insects, pathogens, and ozone. Fran Robson from John Turner's laboratory (University of East Anglia, UK) presented her work on the Arabidopsis sci2 mutant, which has a missense mutation in a KH domain RNA-binding protein. This mutant was identified by a screen based on the restoration of VSP gene expression (a jasmonate inducible gene) in the coi-16 mutant, which is defective in the jasmonate perception/response pathway (Benedetti et al. 1995
). The sci2 single mutant confers hypersensitivity to jasmonate and wounding, an altered response to red light and resistance to drought, infestation by aphids, and the powdery mildew Erysiphe cichoracearum. Gene expression data available through Genevestigator (Zimmermann et al. 2004
) indicate that SCI2 expression is transiently induced by jasmonate, wounding, drought, osmotic stress, and salinity. These data, taken together with the RNA-binding nature of SCI2, suggest that SCI2 regulates responses to jasmonate and different stresses through post-transcriptional regulation.
| RNA PROCESSING |
|---|
In addition, mRNA subcellular localization is an important mechanism for regulating gene function. For example, in Drosophila, the MAGO NASHI (Mago) protein, which is essential for oocyte polarity, binds with part of the exonjunction complex (EJC), and affects localization of target mRNAs. HAPLESS1 (HAP1/AtMago) is an Arabidopsis ortholog of Mago that was discussed briefly by Mark Johnson (Brown University). Disruption of AtMago results in defective pollen tube guidance. Similar to the function of Mago, AtMago may be important for the asymmetric localization of specific mRNAs during pollen tube growth.
John Brown (Scottish Crop Research Institute) presented exciting results from his study on the Arabidopsis nucleolus proteome (Pendle et al. 2005
). Using tandem mass spectrometry, 217 proteins were identified from nucleoli isolated from Arabidopsis cell cultures. Transient expression of the full-length cDNAs of 76 of these proteins, fused to GFP, confirmed nucleolar localization for 87% of them. A comparison with the proteome of the human nucleolus (Leung et al. 2006
) showed that 69% of the Arabidopsis nucleolar proteins have putative orthologs in the human nucleolus. Moreover, the variety of functions identified suggests several new roles for the nucleolus including mRNA splicing surveillance and nonsense-mediated decay (NMD). For instance, six proteins whose animal orthologs are involved in the EJC were found in the Arabidopsis nucleolar proteome. EJCs mark splice junctions after mRNA splicing and are involved in mRNA export and NMD. The role of the nucleolus in RNA surveillance and/or NMD was investigated by analysis of the nucleolar transcriptome. Cloning and sequencing of 226 full-length cDNAs from the nucleolus showed that 38% of them correspond to aberrantly spliced transcripts while the proportions of aberrantly spliced transcripts in the whole nucleus and the whole cell are just 13% and 2%, respectively. According to the rules known to lead to NMD in animals, 67% of the aberrantly spliced transcripts identified in the Arabidopsis nucleolar transcriptome would be subject to NMD. Whether aberrantly spliced transcripts are exported to the nucleolus once they are detected or whether all mRNAs go through the nucleolus for their surveillance is not known. In addition, whether these aberrant transcripts are degraded in the nucleolus or exported to the cytoplasm for degradation remains to be elucidated.
An important component of eukaryotic RNA degradation is the exosome, a macromolecular machine that plays a central role in the processing, surveillance, and turnover of many RNAs (for review, see Buttner et al. 2005
). Investigating the plant exosome is the major research focus of Dmitry A. Belostotsky and his laboratory (State University of New York at Albany). His laboratory has identified the Arabidopsis exosome subunits by tandem affinity purification tag-assisted proteomic and bioinformatic analyses. The different core subunits are evolutionarily conserved. The most studied Arabidopsis exosome subunits are the exonucleases RRP41 and RRP4 (Chekanova et al. 2002
). These two proteins were shown to interact with each other, but analysis of rrp41 and rrp4 loss-of-function mutants revealed that they have different developmental functions. The rrp41 loss-of-function mutant is female gametophytic lethal, whereas the rrp4 loss-of-function mutant is embryo lethal. In the developing seeds of flowering plants, there is a nutritive tissue called endosperm. Before arrest, the rrp4 embryo assumes partial endosperm identity and exhibits a loss of parental imprinting of known key regulatory genes. This results from both silencing of paternal alleles and activation of maternal alleles expression. The effect of knocking down RRP41 or RRP4 gene expression at later stages was investigated using estradiol-inducible RNA interference (RNAi). In order to identify the RNA substrates of these two exosome subunits, whole-genome tiling microarrays were employed. This analysis revealed that the transcriptome was differentially modified (but with some overlap) by the silencing of RRP4 and RRP41. Furthermore, the affected RNAs came from five categories: ribosomal RNAs, sn/snoRNA, miRNA precursors, mRNAs, and unknown noncoding RNAs. Further investigation of these will greatly help in understanding biological functions of the plant exosome.
Additional insights into the RNA degradation processes in plants were provided by Jaimie Van Norman (University of Utah, from the laboratory of Leslie E. Sieburth) and Katarzyna Kruszka (Warsaw University). The Sieburth laboratory identified TRIDENT, the Arabidopsis ortholog of DCP2, an mRNA decapping enzyme. TRIDENT (TDT) function was investigated because tdt mutants produce a disconnected vein pattern on the seed leaves called cotyledons, similar to another Arabidopsis mutant called varicose (vcs) (Deyholos et al. 2003
). The protein encoded by VCS is a homolog of a DCP2-binding protein, GE-1/HELDS, which in animals is required for assembly and activity of the mRNA decapping complex (Fenger-Gron et al. 2005
; Yu et al. 2005b
). Thus, VCS and TDT may function together in RNA degradation. This is supported by the observation that RNAs accumulate in much greater levels in the tdt and vcs mutants compared to wild type. This and other studies suggest that the plant 5' to 3' decay machinery is very similar to that of animals. Furthermore, DCP2 and GE-1/HEDLS were shown in humans to interact with the cytoplasmic LSM (SM-like) complex, which is involved in RNA degradation and processing. The nuclear LSM complex is a core component of U6snRNP involved in splicing. Kruszka reported the identification and cloning of eight Arabidopsis LSM homologs. Six of these showed both cytoplasmic and nuclear localization; one was cytoplasmic, and one was nuclear, suggesting that in Arabidopsis two separate complexes exist. In addition, Kruszka observed a decrease in the level of U6snRNA in AtLsm5 and AtLsm8 mutants, as well as defects in the splicing of some mRNAs. Moreover, a stabilization of ribosomal protein mRNA and of mRNA containing the ARE and DST (RNA decay targeting) elements was observed in the AtLsm5 mutant (but not in AtLsm8). Therefore, AtLSM5 and AtLSM8 are likely involved in RNA splicing and AtLSM5 appears to play a role in RNA degradation, but both processes only affect a subset of mRNAs.
Recent findings about plastid rRNA processing and stability were presented by Thomas Bollenbach (Cornell University, laboratory of David Stern). In plants, the four plastid rRNAs, 16S, 23S, 4.5S, and 5S, and three tRNAs emanate from a single polycistronic primary transcript that is heavily processed. The initial step of the processing pathway is endonucleolytic cleavage followed by exonucleolytic maturation of pre-rRNA 3' ends. Two nucleus-encoded genes from Arabidopsis that mediate this step in chloroplast rRNA processing code for RNase R (RNR1), a hydrolytic 3' to 5' exoribonuclease (Perrin et al. 2004
; Bollenbach et al. 2005
), and polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase), a phosphorolytic 3' to 5' exoribonuclease (Walter et al. 2002
). In the rnr1 mutant, the levels of the different mature rRNAs are variably reduced. The 5S rRNA is the most affected, as it accumulates to only 2% of the wild-type level, and although the rnr1 mutant also accumulates low levels of 3' extended 5S precursors, they appear to be unstable in the mutant background. On the other hand, the pnp mutant, which is defective in 23S 3' processing, accumulates unique 3' extended 23S precursors compared to wild type and rnr1, which are stable in the pnp background. These results showed the importance of exonucleolytic reactions in the processing of rRNA precursors into functional mature rRNAs. Studies of the mechanism leading to pre-5S instability in rnr1 led to the discovery of an EST from tomato, which appears to be derived from a plastid-encoded antisense RNA that is complementary to 5S rRNA and tRNAArg. The Arabidopsis homolog of this RNA, which was named AS5, appears to overaccumulate in the plastids of pnp and rnr1 mutants. Thus, PNPase and RNR1 appear to be involved in the biogenesis of AS5, whose overaccumulation in the rnr1 mutant could explain the dramatic drop in 5S RNA accumulation.
Another aspect of RNA processing discussed at the meeting was RNA editing. Michael Hayes (Cornell University, laboratory of Maureen R. Hanson) highlighted the importance of RNA editing (C-to-U conversion) for the correct expression of many chloroplast genes. Thirty-four editing sites are known in the tobacco chloroplast genome, 33 of which lead to an amino acid substitution. In the absence of consensus motifs around all the editing sites, their recognition by the editing machinery is not yet understood. Michael Hayes used an in vitro chloroplast editing assay to test the editing efficiency of the pcbE C214 site embedded in a synthetic RNAs. This strategy showed that the 13 nt upstream and the 10 nt downstream of C214 are sufficient for editing. The GCCGUU sequence (and its position) in 11 to 7 is especially important.
| NATURAL RNA SENSORS |
|---|
Robert Batey described the remarkable crystal structures of the guanine and the S-adenosylmethionine riboswitches that his group has recently solved (Batey et al. 2004
; Montange and Batey 2006
). Although these particular riboswitches are present in bacteria, they have not yet been found in plants. The guanine riboswitch was found in the 5' UTR of Bacillus subtilis and binds directly to guanine, hypoxanthine, or xanthine. The mechanism of transcription control is similar to the classical transcription attenuation mechanism seen in the trp operon of B. subtilis, which binds the TRAP protein. Ligand binding inhibits the formation of an antiterminator stemloop, thereby promoting transcription termination (Babitzke and Gollnick 2001
; Batey et al. 2004
).
In addition, there is clear evidence for riboswitches in plants, as was discussed briefly by Batey. Arabidopsis, as well as a few other plant and fungi species, carry a thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP) biosynthesis gene that has an aptamer domain. In plants, the riboswitch is located in the 3' UTR instead of the 5' UTR (Sudarsan et al. 2003
). Although the function of this riboswitch is unknown, it has been suggested that it effects either mRNA stability or processing. The structure of the eukaryotic TPP aptamer domain solved by Ban and coworkers revealed a ligand-recognition conformation similar to the riboswitches from bacteria (Thore et al. 2006
).
Natural RNA sensors are also involved in the response to heat shock in mammalian cells. New work in this area was reported by Evgeny Nudler (New York University Medical School). Under heat shock, the transcription elongation factor eEF1A is released from previously bound states and is thought to form a complex with a noncoding heat shock RNA (HSR1). HSR1, which changes conformation dramatically in response to even a slight change in temperature, is thought to act as a thermosensor. Together, eEF1a and HSR1 govern the trimerization of heat shock factor1 (HSF1) from its monomeric form, allowing for the activation of heat-shock protein genes (Shamovsky et al. 2006
).
In addition to responding to heat, changes in RNA structures were suggested to aid in the cold response. Kentaro Nakaminanmi (West Virginia University) gave the example of a cold-shock domain protein from wheat, WCSP1, which may be involved in this process. In Escherichia coli, cold-shock proteins (CSPs) are highly accumulated in response to cold shock (Goldstein et al. 1990
), and function as transcription antiterminators or translational enhancers, by resolving cold-induced RNA secondary structures (Fang et al. 1997
; Bae et al. 2000
). Bacterial CSPs contain RNP1 and RNP2 RNA-binding motifs. In addition to possessing these motifs, WSCP1 has three CCHC-type zinc finger motifs (Karlson et al. 2002
). Both WSCP1 mRNA and protein accumulation appeared to be induced by cold (Karlson et al. 2002
), and a fusion with GFP showed that the protein is then targeted to the nuclear and ER network. Moreover, WSCP1 binds dsDNA, ssDNA, and homoribopolymers, and has a nucleic acid melting activity in vitro (Karlson et al. 2002
; Nakaminami et al. 2005
). Besides, in E. coli WSCP1 complements the cold-sensitive phenotype of a quadruple CSP mutant and has a transcription antitermination activity. Taken together, these results suggest that WSCP1 is a genuine cold-shock protein with a role similar to E. coli CSPs.
| SMALL RNAS INFLUENCE GENOME EVOLUTION |
|---|
Another example of how RNA influences evolution of the genetic sequence was given by Michael Hayes from Maureen Hanson's laboratory (Cornell University), who studies RNA editing of the chloroplast genome (see the RNA processing section). The GCCGUU element downstream from the pcbE C214 editing site is conserved in species that edit, while species that have a T in the C214 position do not have this conserved element, underscoring the effect of editing on evolution.
Similar to the selective pressure for conserving a specific recognition domain or to avoiding one, genes that code for riboswitches (see previous section) have been under selective pressure to maintain a strict secondary structure of their mRNA. The aptamer domain, or ligand binding domain, of each riboswitch has a unique secondary structure that has evolved to recognize a specific ligand. For example, the three-way junction-binding domain of a guanine riboswitch is phylogeneticaly conserved (Mandal et al. 2003
).
| METHODS OF ANALYSIS AND NOVEL TOOLS |
|---|
sRNA microarrays have been used to examine siRNAs and miRNAs within plants by Pamela Green and collaborators (see below). An expansion of microarray technology is seen in the whole genome tiling arrays that are used in transcriptome analysis, studying gene expression, gene discovery, and even in identifying targets of RNA-binding proteins. Tiling arrays, described by Joe Ecker, have the advantage that the DNA oligonucleotides span the entire genome, which allows for mapping of results in chromosome order and improves the accuracy of the genome annotations (the Arabidopsis Tiling Array Transcriptome Express Tool http://signal.salk.edu/cgi-bin/atta; Yamada et al. 2003
).
RNA coimmunoprecipitation chip analysis, or RIP-Chip, also utilizes microarray analysis to identify RNAs that are associated with specific RNA-binding proteins in vivo. Jack Keene (Duke University) used this method in order to characterize the RNA components of messenger RNAprotein complexes, or mRNPs. RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) associate with unique sets of RNAs, and it is therefore possible to identify RNAs involved in the same biological process or response (Keene et al. 2006
). Keene described experiments from his and several other groups that used RIP-Chip and related methods to identify distinct subsets of mRNAs encoding functionally related proteins expressed in eukaryotes from yeasts to plants to mammals. These and other experiments presented support the concept of post-transcriptional RNA operons that he proposed to explain how RNA-binding proteins and noncoding sRNAs regulate mRNA processing at the levels of splicing, export, stability, and translation to form coordinated gene expression networks (Keene and Tenenbaum 2002
). Kenneth Watkins (University of Oregon, laboratory of Alice Barkan) described the use of the RIP-Chip technique to identify substrates for chloroplast PPR proteins and group II intron splicing factors (Schmitz-Linneweber et al. 2005
). In addition to RIP-Chip, methyl-C immunoprecipitation (mCIP) is a similar technique that has been used by Ecker to analyze methylation data and attempt to find methylation patterns within the chromosomes.
Massively parallel signature sequencing (MPSS) and pyrosequencing (Brenner et al. 2000
; Margulies et al. 2005
) are powerful techniques to sequence and measure expression levels of hundreds of thousands of sRNAs (Lu et al. 2005
; Henderson et al. 2006
). Subsequently, the sequences obtained can be quantified and mapped to the relevant genome and transcriptome (Lu et al. 2005
; Henderson et al. 2006
). Green, Carrington, and Bartel reported using these methods to find new miRNAs and investigate the effects of different RNA-silencing mutants. For example, Green, who pioneered the use of these techniques for studying sRNAs, utilizes these techniques to compare the sRNA profiles between rice and Arabidopsis. (A database for the MPSS data, including sRNA data, is available online at http://mpss.udel.edu/at for Arabidopsis and http://mpss.udel.edu/rice for rice.) With Agilent Technologies, Pamela Green and Blake Meyers laboratories developed a DNA microarray with >2000 sRNA sequences and used it to examine tissue-preferential expression patterns in Arabidopsis.
Some Arabidopsis miRNAs currently have only one predicted (or validated) target. With such a large genome, one might expect a miRNA to have multiple targets. RNAhybrid is a program designed to predict new miRNA targets in any organism. RNAhybrid optimizes the free energy of the miRNA target's hybridization site. The putative target mRNAs are filtered through several steps in order to minimize redundancy and to assure that hits are within specific free energy and hybridization constraints. Leonardo Alves-Junior (Bielefeld University in the laboratory of Bernd Weisshaar) described results for Arabidopsis, where 296 potential new targets for miRNAs in 42 families were found. Functional predictions can be made based on the Gene Ontology (GO) annotations, which are now awaiting experimental validation (http://bibiserv.techfak.uni-bielefled.de/rnahybrid/; Rehmsmeier et al. 2004
).
To assist in sRNA cloning data entry, Alex Ebhardt (Simon Fraser University) created Ebbie, a program assisting sRNA cloning projects with up to 1000 sequences (www.bioinformatics.org/ebbie; Ebhardt et al. 2006
). The cloned sequences are flanked by 5' and 3' cloning primers. Ebbie searches for the cloning primers in order to identify and analyze the cloned sequences. The program's output includes a unique ID, orientation, length, sample source, as well as sequence for each clone. Each sequence is further analyzed using locally installed BlastN databases, one of which is a dynamic database that allows for rapid identification of frequently cloned sequences and clusters of sRNA sequences.
RNAprotein interactions involve complicated pathways and structures that are essential for many processes in almost all organisms. RIP-Chip, described above, is one of the techniques being used to gain more insight into RNAprotein interaction networks. In order to organize information about RNA-binding proteins in plants, the Plant RNA Binding Protein/Putative Orthologous Groups Database, or PlantRBP/POGS Database, was created (http://plantrbp.uoregon.edu). In addition to storing data for RBPs, this database attempts to organize all proteins from Arabidopsis, rice, and maize into "putative orthologous groups" (POGs), to annotate POG members with domain content, predicted intracellular location and phylogenetic data, and to display the data for POG members in a manner that facilitates comparative analyses.
| CONCLUDING REMARKS |
|---|
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
Article published online ahead of print. Article and publication date are at http://www.rnajournal.org/cgi/doi/10.1261/rna.303806.
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