Long non-coding RNAs Flashcards
Which RNAs are canonically considered non-coding?
Any RNA which doesn’t get translated and has endogenous activity.
Examples:
1. tRNAs
2. rRNAs
3. snoRNAs
4. snRNAs
5. piRNAs
Which RNAs are canonically considered long non-coding?
Any RNA which doesn’t get translated and has endogenous activity.
Examples:
1. tRNAs
2. rRNAs
3. snoRNAs
4. snRNAs
5. piRNAs
What correlates with species complexity?
non-coding RNAs in the genome. These lead to lots of regulation of the ~2% genome.
RNA can form non-canonical base pairs which lead to them being able to generate complex tertiary structures, including triplexes. Which non-canonical base pairs?
U : G
U : A
There are >16k lncRNAs, which polymerases encode which RNAs?
RNApol1 : rRNA
RNApol2 : mRNA, snoRNA, lncRNA, sncRNA
RNApol3 : tRNA, snRNA
What defines a long non-coding RNA?
- > 200bp.
- Downstream of RNApol2
- Can cis- and/or transregulate chromatin
There are two core proteins that lncRNAs interact with depending on if they cis- or transr-egulate the chromatin, which?
Cis : HOTTIP
Trans : HOTAIR
How does X-chromosome inactivation work in females?
The X-chromosome inactivation center (XIC) transcribes XIST (X-inactive specific transcript) and the antisense TSIX which represses XIST, and vice versa. When there’s a surplus of XIST, it coats the chromosome from which it derives and recruits hyperacetylated histone proteins (MacroH2A, H3, H4) –> chromatin condensation –> inactivation.
HOTAR interacts with XIST on the chromosome which is to be inactivated. (??)
What’s the function of HOTAIR?
HOTAIR = HOX transcript antisense RNA.
It represses the expression of the HOX-D cluster in a similar way that XIST represses its X-chromosome.
Apart from the mechanisms underlying X-chromosome- and HOX inactivation, what processes are lncRNAs known for regulating?
- Regulation of splicing via Alu/SINEB2, PTV1 and MALAT1
- Production of microproteins (function unknown). The microproteins often have the opposite regulatory function as the corresponding lncRNA.
(The mechanism may be the same as of HOTAIR-HOXD and XIST-TSIX.) - Acting like decoy RNA cytosolically, regulating chemical biological equilibriums and translations.
- Can generate paraspeckles, irregular structures in the nucleus.
What’s chIRP-MS? (comprehensive identification of RNA binding proteins)
It’s a method of precipitating and characterising RNA binding proteins.
- Cross link cells in vivo.
- Lyse cells, add biotinyolated oligos complementary to the target RNA.
- Purify the lysate w/ streptavidin magnetic beads which bind the biotin.
- Perform biotin elution.
- Perform M/S.
How are circular RNAs formed?
Circular lncRNAs are formed through back-splicing. This is when two splice sites become covalently bounded. 3’/5’ flanking complementary Alu sequences catalyze the formation of circRNAs (Alu is a repetitive element).
circRNAs can contain exons as well as introns.
circRNAs are more stable than linear RNA.
What’s the functions of circular RNAs (4)?
- miRNA sponges (miRNA hosts small seed sequences which are bound by the circRNA.
- RBP sponges (contains binding sites)
- Recruits chromatin modifiers
- Template for translation.
What’s ribosome profiling?
You find the RNA sites to which ribosomes bind. If you know where a protein binds, you can assay its responsiveness to stimuli this way.
1. Lyse cells.
2. Fixate RNA-protein interactions with paraffin.
3. Treat lysate extensively w/ lots of nucleases.
4. Sequence the product. Any shielded RNA will remain.