PIWI-interacting RNAs: small RNAs with big functions

被引:0
|
作者
Deniz M. Ozata
Ildar Gainetdinov
Ansgar Zoch
Dónal O’Carroll
Phillip D. Zamore
机构
[1] University of Massachusetts Medical School,RNA Therapeutics Institute and Howard Hughes Medical Institute
[2] University of Edinburgh,MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine, Institute for Stem Cell Research, School of Biological Sciences
[3] The University of Edinburgh,Wellcome Centre for Cell Biology, School of Biological Sciences
来源
Nature Reviews Genetics | 2019年 / 20卷
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摘要
In animals, PIWI-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) of 21–35 nucleotides in length silence transposable elements, regulate gene expression and fight viral infection. piRNAs guide PIWI proteins to cleave target RNA, promote heterochromatin assembly and methylate DNA. The architecture of the piRNA pathway allows it both to provide adaptive, sequence-based immunity to rapidly evolving viruses and transposons and to regulate conserved host genes. piRNAs silence transposons in the germ line of most animals, whereas somatic piRNA functions have been lost, gained and lost again across evolution. Moreover, most piRNA pathway proteins are deeply conserved, but different animals employ remarkably divergent strategies to produce piRNA precursor transcripts. Here, we discuss how a common piRNA pathway allows animals to recognize diverse targets, ranging from selfish genetic elements to genes essential for gametogenesis.
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页码:89 / 108
页数:19
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