Pervasive Transcription of the Human Genome Produces Thousands of Previously Unidentified Long Intergenic Noncoding RNAs
University of California, San Francisco
Abstract
Known protein coding gene exons compose less than 3% of the human genome. The remaining 97% is largely uncharted territory, with only a small fraction characterized. The recent observation of transcription in this intergenic territory has stimulated debate about the extent of intergenic transcription and whether these intergenic RNAs are functional. Here we directly observed with a large set of RNA-seq data covering a wide array of human tissue types that the majority of the genome is indeed transcribed, corroborating recent observations by the ENCODE project. Furthermore, using de novo transcriptome assembly of this RNA-seq data, we found that intergenic regions encode far more long intergenic noncoding RNAs…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 25.87
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 47
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Intergenic region
- Biology
- Genetics
- Genome
- Non-coding RNA
- Transcription (linguistics)
- Gene
- ENCODE