4.5 Article

Global analysis of biogenesis, stability and sub-cellular localization of lncRNAs mapping to intragenic regions of the human genome

Journal

RNA BIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages 877-892

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15476286.2015.1062960

Keywords

antisense lncRNAs; eukaryotic transcription; Intronic lncRNAs; RNA stability; RNA subcellular localization

Funding

  1. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo (FAPESP)
  2. FAPESP
  3. CNPq

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Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) that map to intragenic regions of the human genome with the same (intronic lncRNAs) or opposite orientation (antisense lncRNAs) relative to protein-coding mRNAs have been largely dismissed from biochemical and functional characterization due to the belief that they are mRNA precursors, byproducts of RNA splicing or simply transcriptional noise. In this work, we used a custom microarray to investigate aspects of the biogenesis, processing, stability, evolutionary conservation, and cellular localization of approximate to 6,000 intronic lncRNAs and approximate to 10,000 antisense lncRNAs. Most intronic (2,903 of 3,427, 85%) and antisense lncRNAs (4,945 of 5,214, 95%) expressed in HeLa cells showed evidence of 5 cap modification, compatible with their transcription by RNAP II. Antisense lncRNAs (median t(1/2) = 3.9h) were significantly (p < 0.0001) more stable than mRNAs(median t(1/2) = 3.2h), whereas intronic lncRNAs (median t(1/2) = 2.1h) comprised a more heterogeneous class that included both stable (t(1/2) > 3h) and unstable (t(1/2) < 1h) transcripts. Intragenic lncRNAs display evidence of evolutionary conservation, have little/no coding potential and were ubiquitously detected in the cytoplasm. Notably, a fraction of the intronic and antisense lncRNAs (13 and 15%, respectively) were expressed from loci at which the corresponding host mRNA was not detected. The abundances of a subset of intronic/antisense lncRNAs were correlated (r |0.8|) with those of genes encoding proteins involved in cell division and DNA replication. Taken together, the findings of this study contribute novel biochemical and genomic informationregarding intronic and antisense lncRNAs, supporting the notion that these classes include independently transcribed RNAs with potentials for exerting regulatory functions in the cell.

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