Small ORFs as New Regulators of Pri-miRNAs and miRNAs Expression in Human and Drosophila

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Abstract

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small regulatory non-coding RNAs, resulting from the cleav-age of long primary transcripts (pri-miRNAs) in the nucleus by the Microprocessor complex generating precursors (pre-miRNAs) that are then exported to the cytoplasm and processed into mature miRNAs. Some miRNAs are hosted in pri-miRNAs annotated as long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) and defined as MIRHGs (for miRNA Host Genes). However, several lnc pri-miRNAs contain translatable small open reading frames (smORFs). If smORFs present within lncRNAs can encode functional small peptides, they can also constitute cis-regulatory elements involved in lncRNA decay. Here, we investigated the possible involvement of smORFs in the regulation of lnc pri-miRNAs in Human and Drosophila, focusing on pri-miRNAs previously shown to contain translatable smORFs. We show that smORFs regulate the expression levels of human pri-miR-155 and pri-miR-497, and Drosophila pri-miR-8 and pri-miR-14, and also affect the expression and activity of their associated miRNAs. This smORF-dependent regulation is independent of the nucleotidic and amino acidic sequences of the smORFs and is sensitive to the ribosome-stalling drug cycloheximide, suggesting the involvement of translational events. This study identifies smORFs as new cis-acting elements involved in the regulation of pri-miRNAs and miRNAs expression, in both Human and Drosophila melanogaster.

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Dozier, C., Montigny, A., Viladrich, M., Culerrier, R., Combier, J. P., Besson, A., & Plaza, S. (2022). Small ORFs as New Regulators of Pri-miRNAs and miRNAs Expression in Human and Drosophila. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 23(10). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23105764

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