The evidence for a microRNA product of human DROSHA gene

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Abstract

MicroRNAs are short RNA molecules that regulate function and stability of a large subset of eukaryotic mRNAs. In the main pathway of microRNA biogenesis, a short “hairpin” is excised from a primary transcript by ribonuclease DROSHA, followed by additional nucleolytic processing by DICER and inclusion of the mature microRNA into the RNA-induced silencing complex. We report that a microRNA-like molecule is encoded by human DROSHA gene within a predicted stem-loop element of the respective transcript. This putative mature microRNA is complementary to DROSHA transcript variant 1 and can attenuate expression of the corresponding protein. The findings suggest a possibility for a negative feedback loop, wherein DROSHA processes its own transcript and produces an inhibitor of its own biosynthesis.

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Mechtler, P., Johnson, S., Slabodkin, H., Cohanim, A. B., Brodsky, L., & Kandel, E. S. (2017). The evidence for a microRNA product of human DROSHA gene. RNA Biology, 14(11), 1508–1513. https://doi.org/10.1080/15476286.2017.1342934

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