The small noncoding RNA is dispensable to mouse development.

RNA

Laboratory of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, National Cancer Institute, The National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Vault RNAs (vtRNAs) are small non-coding RNAs with diverse functions, including involvement in regulating cell survival, responding to viral infections, and drug resistance, beyond their role in vault particles.
  • - Researchers created a mouse model with a specific loss of the Vaultrc5 vtRNA to explore its physiological roles, discovering that these mice are generally normal but have reduced platelet counts, suggesting vtRNAs may influence blood cell production.
  • - This study opens up future investigations on how the absence of Vaultrc5 affects various biological processes, especially under stress conditions like cancer, viral attack, or drug treatments.

Article Abstract

Vault RNAs (vtRNAs) are evolutionarily conserved small noncoding RNAs transcribed by RNA polymerase III. Vault RNAs were initially described as components of the vault particle, but have since been assigned multiple vault-independent functions, including regulation of PKR activity, apoptosis, autophagy, lysosome biogenesis, and viral particle trafficking. The full-length transcript has also been described as a noncanonical source of miRNAs, which are processed in a DICER-dependent manner. As central molecules in vault-dependent and independent processes, vtRNAs have been attributed numerous biological roles, including regulation of cell proliferation and survival, response to viral infections, drug resistance, and animal development. Yet, their impact to mammalian physiology remains largely unexplored. To study vault RNAs in vivo we generated a mouse line with a conditional loss-of-function allele. Because is the sole murine vtRNA, this allele enables the characterization of the physiological requirements of this conserved class of small regulatory RNAs in mammals. Using this strain, we show that mice constitutively null for are viable and histologically normal but have a slight reduction in platelet counts, pointing to a potential role for vtRNAs in hematopoiesis. This work paves the way for further in vivo characterizations of this abundant but mysterious RNA molecule. Specifically, it enables the study of the biological consequences of constitutive or lineage-specific deletion and of the physiological requirements for an intact during normal hematopoiesis or in response to cellular stresses such as oncogene expression, viral infection, or drug treatment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11482604PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1261/rna.080161.124DOI Listing

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