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Plant Physiology 147:58-62 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists Activity Range of Arabidopsis Small RNAs Derived from Different Biogenesis Pathways1,[W]Department of Plant Biology, University of California, Davis, California 95616 (E.M.T., J.L.B.); Department of Plant Sciences, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel (J.P.A., Y.E.); and School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria 3800, Australia (J.L.B.)
Several classes of small RNAs are known in plants and accumulating evidence indicates that different classes of small RNAs may function either cell autonomously or noncell autonomously to regulate gene expression. Here, a simple visual assay used to compare the biological activity of small RNAs produced via different biogenesis pathways suggests that trans-acting small interfering RNAs (tasiRNAs) are mobile while confirming that microRNAs (miRNAs) are not. Small RNAs have several functions in plant cells, with small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) involved in immunity against invading nucleic acids (RNA viruses and transposons) and in silencing of repetitive DNA. In contrast, miRNAs modulate physiological and developmental gene expression, a role also played by a limited number of siRNAs produced from endogenous genes. Transgene-born or viral-induced siRNAs can move from cell to cell. Current evidence suggests that miRNAs are not mobile, while it is unknown if endogenously encoded siRNAs such as tasiRNAs act noncell autonomously. The question of small RNA mobility is biologically critical since these molecules may act as signals.
During RNA silencing, Dicer ribonuclease enzymes produce 21- to 24-nucleotide RNAs from double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) substrates (Baulcombe, 2004
While many siRNAs are generated against foreign nucleic acids or transcripts generated from repetitive elements and target the sequences from which they are derived, tasiRNAs can silence messages from loci other than those from which they are derived and can act in developmental and physiological programs (Brodersen and Voinnet, 2006
We compared the phenotypic effects of small RNAs derived via different biogenesis pathways from transgenic synthetic precursors, each targeting the same Arabidopsis phytoene destaurase (PDS) transcripts, loss of which results in photobleaching of green tissues. Different small RNA precursors, miRNA, siRNA, and tasiRNA mimics, were generated as described in Supplemental Materials and Methods S1. The precursors were driven by three promoters with restricted expression patterns: AS1 (expressed in lateral organs), AP3 (expressed in sepal margins), and SUC2 (expressed in phloem companion cells). When driven by the AS1 promoter, both miR-PDS-I and siRNA-PDS caused photobleaching throughout the cotyledons, demonstrating both constructs are functional and can produce relatively equivalent phenotypes (Fig. 1, A and B
). When driven with the AP3 promoter, miR-PDS-I and siRNA-PDS result in strikingly different phenotypes (Fig. 1, C and E). In AP3>>miR-PDS-I flowers, sepal margins are photobleached, whereas AP3>>siRNA-PDS flowers exhibited photobleaching throughout the sepals. In SUC2>>siRNA-PDS plants, photobleaching was observed spreading from primary and secondary leaf veins (Fig. 1F) as described previously (Dunoyer et al., 2007
To stimulate formation of tasiRNAs, we mimicked the two-hit mode for tasiRNA biogenesis whereby the intervening ssRNA of a mRNA cleaved (or bound) at two sites by miRNA action becomes a template for RDR6, or another RdRP, and siRNA biogenesis (Axtell et al., 2006
The primary difference distinguishing the dsRNA precursors produced by transcription of miR-PDS versus siRNA-PDS and the presumed dsRNA ta-siRNA intermediate is the lack of perfect complementarity in the folded pre-miRNA (Fig. 2
). This feature could preclude processing by DCL enzymes other than DCL1. Thus one scenario for their different biological activities is that different small RNAs are funneled through different biochemical pathways that are canalized by interactions between specific Dicer enzymes and distinct RISC complexes possibly restricted by subcellular location of processing reactions. For example, DCL1-generated miRNAs would be introduced into RISC complexes whose accessory proteins confer cell autonomy to miRNAs, while DCL4-processed siRNAs would be handed to RISC complexes whose accessory proteins allow for the transmission of mobile silencing signals. Reduction of induction of mobile silencing signals when dsRNA substrates normally processed by DCL4 are shunted through DCL1 (in a dcl2 dcl3 dcl4 background) is consistent with this hypothesis (Dunoyer et al., 2007
Several recent studies have documented the presence of miRNAs in the phloem of several plant species and the translocation of one miRNA, miR399, through a graft junction (Yoo et al., 2004
Our results for the miR-PDS genes add to the evidence that miRNAs act autonomously and are therefore unlikely to act as signaling molecules (Parizotto et al., 2004
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
Three recent papers (Takeda A, Iwasaki S, Watanabe T, Utsumi M, Watanabe Y [2008] The mechanism selecting the guide strand from small RNA duplexes is different among Argonaute proteins. Plant Cell Physiol [in press]; Mi S, Cai T, Hu Y, Hodges E, Ni F, Wu L, Li S, Zhou H, Long C, Chen S, et al [2008] Sorting of small RNAs into Arabidopsis Argonaute complexes is directed by the 5' terminal nucleotide. Cell [in press]; Montgomery TA, Howell MD, Cuperus JT, Li D, Hansen JE, Alexander AL, Chapman EJ, Fahlgren N, Allen E, Carrington JC [2008] Specificity of ARGONAUTE7-miR390 interaction and dual functionality in TAS3 trans-acting siRNA formation. Cell [in press]) provide evidence that different AGO (argonaute) proteins preferentially recruit specific small RNAs based on the 5' terminal nucleotide identity or a specific small RNA (miR390) in the case of AGO7, thus providing a glimpse of how small RNAs are sorted to specific AGO complexes.
We thank Sandy Floyd, Ira Pekker, Bernie Carroll, and Mike Axtell for constructive comments on this manuscript. Received January 29, 2008; accepted March 15, 2008; published May 7, 2008.
1 This work was supported by the Australian Research Council (grant nos. DP0771232 and FF0561326), the U.S. National Science Foundation (grant no. IOB–0515435), and the Israel Science Foundation (grant no. 863–06).
2 These authors contributed equally to the article.
3 Present address: Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720. The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: John L. Bowman (john.bowman{at}sci.monash.edu.au).
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.108.117119 * Corresponding author; e-mail john.bowman{at}sci.monash.edu.au.
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