Domestication of transposable elements into MicroRNA genes in plants.

Transposable elements (TE) usually take up a substantial portion of eukaryotic genome. Activities of TEs can cause genome instability or gene mutations that are harmful or even disastrous to the host. TEs also contribute to gene and genome evolution at many aspects. Part of miRNA genes in mammals ha...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yang Li, Chaoqun Li, Jie Xia, Youxin Jin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3086885?pdf=render
id doaj-3920fa02cba8448f9589acfe69a676bc
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3920fa02cba8448f9589acfe69a676bc2020-11-25T02:15:41ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0165e1921210.1371/journal.pone.0019212Domestication of transposable elements into MicroRNA genes in plants.Yang LiChaoqun LiJie XiaYouxin JinTransposable elements (TE) usually take up a substantial portion of eukaryotic genome. Activities of TEs can cause genome instability or gene mutations that are harmful or even disastrous to the host. TEs also contribute to gene and genome evolution at many aspects. Part of miRNA genes in mammals have been found to derive from transposons while convincing evidences are absent for plants. We found that a considerable number of previously annotated plant miRNAs are identical or homologous to transposons (TE-MIR), which include a small number of bona fide miRNA genes that conform to generally accepted plant miRNA annotation rules, and hairpin derived siRNAs likely to be pre-evolved miRNAs. Analysis of these TE-MIRs indicate that transitions from the medium to high copy TEs into miRNA genes may undergo steps such as inverted repeat formation, sequence speciation and adaptation to miRNA biogenesis. We also identified initial target genes of the TE-MIRs, which contain homologous sequences in their CDS as consequence of cognate TE insertions. About one-third of the initial target mRNAs are supported by publicly available degradome sequencing data for TE-MIR sRNA induced cleavages. Targets of the TE-MIRs are biased to non-TE related genes indicating their penchant to acquire cellular functions during evolution. Interestingly, most of these TE insertions span boundaries between coding and non-coding sequences indicating their incorporation into CDS through alteration of splicing or translation start or stop signals. Taken together, our findings suggest that TEs in gene rich regions can form foldbacks in non-coding part of transcripts that may eventually evolve into miRNA genes or be integrated into protein coding sequences to form potential targets in a "temperate" manner. Thus, transposons may supply as resources for the evolution of miRNA-target interactions in plants.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3086885?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yang Li
Chaoqun Li
Jie Xia
Youxin Jin
spellingShingle Yang Li
Chaoqun Li
Jie Xia
Youxin Jin
Domestication of transposable elements into MicroRNA genes in plants.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Yang Li
Chaoqun Li
Jie Xia
Youxin Jin
author_sort Yang Li
title Domestication of transposable elements into MicroRNA genes in plants.
title_short Domestication of transposable elements into MicroRNA genes in plants.
title_full Domestication of transposable elements into MicroRNA genes in plants.
title_fullStr Domestication of transposable elements into MicroRNA genes in plants.
title_full_unstemmed Domestication of transposable elements into MicroRNA genes in plants.
title_sort domestication of transposable elements into microrna genes in plants.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Transposable elements (TE) usually take up a substantial portion of eukaryotic genome. Activities of TEs can cause genome instability or gene mutations that are harmful or even disastrous to the host. TEs also contribute to gene and genome evolution at many aspects. Part of miRNA genes in mammals have been found to derive from transposons while convincing evidences are absent for plants. We found that a considerable number of previously annotated plant miRNAs are identical or homologous to transposons (TE-MIR), which include a small number of bona fide miRNA genes that conform to generally accepted plant miRNA annotation rules, and hairpin derived siRNAs likely to be pre-evolved miRNAs. Analysis of these TE-MIRs indicate that transitions from the medium to high copy TEs into miRNA genes may undergo steps such as inverted repeat formation, sequence speciation and adaptation to miRNA biogenesis. We also identified initial target genes of the TE-MIRs, which contain homologous sequences in their CDS as consequence of cognate TE insertions. About one-third of the initial target mRNAs are supported by publicly available degradome sequencing data for TE-MIR sRNA induced cleavages. Targets of the TE-MIRs are biased to non-TE related genes indicating their penchant to acquire cellular functions during evolution. Interestingly, most of these TE insertions span boundaries between coding and non-coding sequences indicating their incorporation into CDS through alteration of splicing or translation start or stop signals. Taken together, our findings suggest that TEs in gene rich regions can form foldbacks in non-coding part of transcripts that may eventually evolve into miRNA genes or be integrated into protein coding sequences to form potential targets in a "temperate" manner. Thus, transposons may supply as resources for the evolution of miRNA-target interactions in plants.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3086885?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT yangli domesticationoftransposableelementsintomicrornagenesinplants
AT chaoqunli domesticationoftransposableelementsintomicrornagenesinplants
AT jiexia domesticationoftransposableelementsintomicrornagenesinplants
AT youxinjin domesticationoftransposableelementsintomicrornagenesinplants
_version_ 1724894590069112832