In plants, microRNA (miRNA)-target complementarity has long been considered the predominant factor determining the silencing outcome of the miRNA-target interaction, although the efficacy of such interactions have rarely been appraised in plants. Here, we perform in planta silencing efficacy assays on seven Arabidopsis genes, all of which contain conserved miR159-binding sites of analogous complementarity. These genes were found to be differentially silenced by miR159; , , , , and were all poorly silenced, whereas and were strongly silenced. Curiously, this is consistent with previous genetic analysis defining and as the major functional targets of miR159. Neither the free energy of miR159-target complementarity, nor miRNA binding site accessibility, as determined by flanking region AU content, could fully explain the discrepancy of miR159 silencing efficacy. Instead, we found that and were both predicted to contain a distinctive RNA secondary structure abutting the miR159 binding site. The structure is composed of two stem-loops (SLs) that are predicted to form in /65 homologs of species as evolutionary distant as gymnosperms. Functional analysis found that the RNA structure in correlated with strong silencing efficacy; introducing mutations to disrupt either SL attenuated miR159 efficacy, while introducing complementary mutations to restore the SLs, but not the sequence, restored strong miR159-mediated silencing. Therefore, it appears that this RNA secondary structure demarcates / as sensitive targets of miR159, which underpins the narrow functional specificity of Arabidopsis miR159.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5490886 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1104/pp.16.01898 | DOI Listing |
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