Principles of MicroRNA–Target Recognition
European Molecular Biology Laboratory
Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are short non-coding RNAs that regulate gene expression in plants and animals. Although their biological importance has become clear, how they recognize and regulate target genes remains less well understood. Here, we systematically evaluate the minimal requirements for functional miRNA-target duplexes in vivo and distinguish classes of target sites with different functional properties. Target sites can be grouped into two broad categories. 5' dominant sites have sufficient complementarity to the miRNA 5' end to function with little or no support from pairing to the miRNA 3' end. Indeed, sites with 3' pairing below the random noise level are functional given a strong 5' end. In contrast, 3'…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 56.59
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 51
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Biology
- microRNA
- Computational biology
- Gene
- Genetics
- Genome
- Complementarity (molecular biology)
- Gene silencing