piRNA-mediated repression of transposable elements (TE) in the germline limits the accumulation of mutations caused by their transposition. It is not clear whether the piRNA pathway plays a role in adult, nongonadal tissues in To address this question, we analyzed the small RNA content of adult heads. We found that the varying amount of piRNA-sized, ping-pong positive molecules in heads correlates with contamination by gonadal tissue during RNA extraction, suggesting that most of the piRNAs detected in heads originate from gonads. We next sequenced the heads of wild-type and mutants to address whether loss of function would affect the low amount of piRNA-sized, ping-pong negative molecules that are still detected in heads hand-checked to avoid gonadal contamination. We find that loss of does not significantly affect these 24-28 nt RNAs. Instead, we observe increased siRNA levels against the majority of TE families. To determine the effect of this siRNA level change on transposon expression, we sequenced the transcriptome of wild-type, , and double-mutant heads. We find that RNA expression levels of the majority of TE in or mutants remain unchanged and that TE transcripts increase only in double-mutants. These results lead us to suggest a dual-layer model for TE repression in adult somatic tissues. Piwi-mediated gene silencing established during embryogenesis constitutes the first layer of TE repression whereas Dicer-2-dependent siRNA-mediated silencing provides a backup mechanism to repress TEs that escape silencing by Piwi.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6239173PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1261/rna.067173.118DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

amount pirna-sized
8
pirna-sized ping-pong
8
detected heads
8
levels majority
8
heads
7
dual-layer transposon
4
repression
4
transposon repression
4
repression heads
4
heads pirna-mediated
4

Similar Publications

piRNA-mediated repression of transposable elements (TE) in the germline limits the accumulation of mutations caused by their transposition. It is not clear whether the piRNA pathway plays a role in adult, nongonadal tissues in To address this question, we analyzed the small RNA content of adult heads. We found that the varying amount of piRNA-sized, ping-pong positive molecules in heads correlates with contamination by gonadal tissue during RNA extraction, suggesting that most of the piRNAs detected in heads originate from gonads.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!