A Distinct Small RNA Pathway Silences Selfish Genetic Elements in the Germline
University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School · Institute of Molecular Genetics
Abstract
In the Drosophila germline, repeat-associated small interfering RNAs (rasiRNAs) ensure genomic stability by silencing endogenous selfish genetic elements such as retrotransposons and repetitive sequences. Whereas small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) derive from both the sense and antisense strands of their double-stranded RNA precursors, rasiRNAs arise mainly from the antisense strand. rasiRNA production appears not to require Dicer-1, which makes microRNAs (miRNAs), or Dicer-2, which makes siRNAs, and rasiRNAs lack the 2',3' hydroxy termini characteristic of animal siRNA and miRNA. Unlike siRNAs and miRNAs, rasiRNAs function through the Piwi, rather than the Ago, Argonaute protein subfamily. Our data suggest that…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 42.25
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 36
Authors
6- VVVasily V. VaginCorresponding
University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Institute of Molecular Genetics
- AAAlla A. SigovaCorresponding
University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Institute of Molecular Genetics
- CLChengjian Li
University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Institute of Molecular Genetics
- HSHervé Seitz
University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Institute of Molecular Genetics
- ВАВ. А. Гвоздев
University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Institute of Molecular Genetics
Topics & keywords
- Germline
- Biology
- Genetics
- RNA
- Evolutionary biology
- Gene