RNA interference is a form of gene silencing in which the nuclease Dicer cleaves double-stranded RNA into small interfering RNAs. Here we report a role for Dicer in chromosome segregation of fission yeast. Deletion of the Dicer (dcr1+) gene caused slow growth, sensitivity to thiabendazole, lagging chromosomes during anaphase, and abrogated silencing of centromeric repeats. As Dicer in other species, Dcr1p degraded double-stranded RNA into ≈23 nucleotide fragments in vitro, and dcr1Δ cells were partially rescued by expression of human Dicer, indicating evolutionarily conserved functions. Expression profiling demonstrated that dcr1- was required for silencing of two genes containing a conserved motif.
CITATION STYLE
Provost, P., Silverstein, R. A., Dishart, D., Walfridsson, J., Djupedal, I., Kniola, B., … Ekwall, K. (2002). Dicer is required for chromosome segregation and gene silencing in fission yeast cells. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 99(26), 16648–16653. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.212633199
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