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The regulatory impact of RNA-binding proteins on microRNA targeting

Cited 33 time in Web of Science Cited 43 time in Scopus
Authors

Kim, Sukjun; Kim, Soyoung; Chang, Hee Ryung; Kim, Doyeon; Park, Junehee; Son, Narae; Park, Joori; Yoon, Minhyuk; Chae, Gwangung; Kim, Young-Kook; Kim, V. Narry; Kim, Yoon Ki; Nam, Jin-Wu; Shin, Chanseok; Baek, Daehyun

Issue Date
2021-12
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Nature Communications, Vol.12 No.1, p. 5057
Abstract
miRNAs are loaded into Argonaute protein and repress complementary mRNA targets. Here the authors show the unappreciated role of RNA binding proteins for efficient miRNA targeting and expand the current understanding of miRNA targeting. Argonaute is the primary mediator of metazoan miRNA targeting (MT). Among the currently identified >1,500 human RNA-binding proteins (RBPs), there are only a handful of RBPs known to enhance MT and several others reported to suppress MT, leaving the global impact of RBPs on MT elusive. In this study, we have systematically analyzed transcriptome-wide binding sites for 150 human RBPs and evaluated the quantitative effect of individual RBPs on MT efficacy. In contrast to previous studies, we show that most RBPs significantly affect MT and that all of those MT-regulating RBPs function as MT enhancers rather than suppressors, by making the local secondary structure of the target site accessible to Argonaute. Our findings illuminate the unappreciated regulatory impact of human RBPs on MT, and as these RBPs may play key roles in the gene regulatory network governed by metazoan miRNAs, MT should be understood in the context of co-regulating RBPs.
ISSN
2041-1723
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/189510
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  • College of Natural Sciences
  • School of Biological Sciences
Research Area Molecular Biology & Genetics

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