Author:
PILLAI RAMESH S.,ARTUS CAROLINE G.,FILIPOWICZ WITOLD
Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are ~21-nt-long RNAs involved in regulating development, differentiation, and other processes in eukaryotes. In metazoa, nearly all miRNAs control gene expression by imperfectly base-pairing with the 3′slated region (3′f target mRNAs and repressing protein synthesis by an unknown mechanism. It is also unknown whether miRNA–mRNA duplexes containing mismatches and bulges provide specific features that are recognized by factors mediating the repression. miRNAs form part of ribonucleoprotein complexes, miRNPs, that contain Argonaute (Ago) and other proteins. Here we demonstrate that effects of miRNAs on translation can be mimicked in human HeLa cells by the miRNA-independent tethering of Ago proteins to the 3′ a reporter mRNA. Inhibition of protein synthesis occurred without a change in the reporter mRNA level and was dependent on the number, but not the position, of the hairpins tethering hAgo2 to the 3′hese findings indicate that a primary function of miRNAs is to guide their associated proteins to the mRNA.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
321 articles.
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