4.7 Article

Target Landscape of Conserved Plant MicroRNAs and the Complexities of Their Ancient MicroRNA-Binding Sites

Journal

PLANT AND CELL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 64, Issue 6, Pages 604-621

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/pcp/pcad019

Keywords

Land plants; MicroRNA; MicroRNA target; RNA degradome; RNA secondary structure

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In plants, the relationships between microRNAs (miRNAs) and their target genes are complex, with predictions indicating numerous and diverse targets based on complementarity. However, there is also a hypothesis suggesting that miRNA specificity is constrained and limited to a few targets with compatible expression. To explore these opposing views, a bioinformatic pipeline was used to identify highly conserved miRNA targets across species. The results supported the constrained hypothesis, showing that the majority of miRNA targets belong to conserved target gene families, with a minority of secondary families or non-conserved targets.
In plants, microRNA (miRNA)-target interactions (MTIs) require high complementarity, a feature from which bioinformatic programs have predicted numerous and diverse targets for any given miRNA, promoting the idea of complex miRNA networks. Opposing this is a hypothesis of constrained miRNA specificity, in which functional MTIs are restricted to the few targets whose required expression output is compatible with the expression of the miRNA. To explore these opposing views, the bioinformatic pipeline Targets Ranked Using Experimental Evidence was applied to strongly conserved miRNAs to identity their high-evidence (HE) targets across species. For each miRNA family, HE targets predominantly consisted of homologs from one conserved target gene family (primary family). These primary families corresponded to the known canonical miRNA-target families, validating the approach. Very few additional HE target families were identified (secondary family), and if so, they were likely functionally related to the primary family. Many primary target families contained highly conserved nucleotide sequences flanking their miRNA-binding sites that were enriched in HE homologs across species. A number of these flanking sequences are predicted to form conserved RNA secondary structures that preferentially base pair with the miRNA-binding site, implying that these sites are highly structured. Our findings support a target landscape view that is dominated by the conserved primary target families, with a minority of either secondary target families or non-conserved targets. This is consistent with the constrained hypothesis of functional miRNA specificity, which potentially in part is being facilitated by features beyond complementarity.

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