MicroRNA enrichment among short 'ultraconserved' sequences in insects

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Abstract

MicroRNAs are short (∼22 nt) regulatory RNA molecules that play key roles in metazoan development and have been implicated in human disease. First discovered in Caenorhabditis elegans, over 2500 microRNAs have been isolated in metazoans and plants; it has been estimated that there may be more than a thousand microRNA genes in the human genome alone. Motivated by the experimental observation of strong conservation of the microRNA let-7 among nearly all metazoans, we developed a novel methodology to characterize the class of such strongly conserved sequences: we identified a non-redundant set of all sequences 20 to 29 bases in length that are shared among three insects: fly, bee and mosquito. Among the few hundred sequences greater than 20 bases in length are close to 40% of the 78 confirmed fly microRNAs, along with other non-coding RNAs and coding sequence. © 2006 Oxford University Press.

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Tran, T., Havlak, P., & Miller, J. (2006). MicroRNA enrichment among short “ultraconserved” sequences in insects. Nucleic Acids Research, 34(9). https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl173

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