Long noncoding RNAs are generated from the mitochondrial genome and regulated by nuclear-encoded proteins

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Abstract

Human mitochondrial long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have not been described to date. By analysis of deep-sequencing data we have identified three lncRNAs generated from the mitochondrial genome and confirmed their expression by Northern blotting and strand-specific qRT-PCR. We show that the abundance of these lncRNAs is comparable to their complementary mRNAs and that nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins involved in RNA processing regulate their expression. We also identify the 5′ and 3′ transcript ends of the three lncRNAs and show that mitochondrial RNase P protein 1 (MRPP1) is important for the processing of these transcripts. Finally, we show that mitochondrial lncRNAs form intermolecular duplexes and that their abundance is cell- and tissue-specific, suggesting a functional role in the regulation of mitochondrial gene expression. Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. Copyright © 2011 RNA Society.

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Rackham, O., Shearwood, A. M. J., Mercer, T. R., Davies, S. M. K., Mattick, J. S., & Filipovska, A. (2011). Long noncoding RNAs are generated from the mitochondrial genome and regulated by nuclear-encoded proteins. RNA, 17(12), 2085–2093. https://doi.org/10.1261/rna.029405.111

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