Abstract

BackgroundThe genome is pervasively transcribed but most transcripts do not code for proteins, constituting non-protein-coding RNAs. Despite increasing numbers of functional reports of individual long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs), assessing the extent of functionality among the non-coding transcriptional output of mammalian cells remains intricate. In the protein-coding world, transcripts differentially expressed in the context of processes essential for the survival of multicellular organisms have been instrumental in the discovery of functionally relevant proteins and their deregulation is frequently associated with diseases. We therefore systematically identified lncRNAs expressed differentially in response to oncologically relevant processes and cell-cycle, p53 and STAT3 pathways, using tiling arrays.ResultsWe found that up to 80% of the pathway-triggered transcriptional responses are non-coding. Among these we identified very large macroRNAs with pathway-specific expression patterns and demonstrated that these are likely continuous transcripts. MacroRNAs contain elements conserved in mammals and sauropsids, which in part exhibit conserved RNA secondary structure. Comparing evolutionary rates of a macroRNA to adjacent protein-coding genes suggests a local action of the transcript. Finally, in different grades of astrocytoma, a tumor disease unrelated to the initially used cell lines, macroRNAs are differentially expressed.ConclusionsIt has been shown previously that the majority of expressed non-ribosomal transcripts are non-coding. We now conclude that differential expression triggered by signaling pathways gives rise to a similar abundance of non-coding content. It is thus unlikely that the prevalence of non-coding transcripts in the cell is a trivial consequence of leaky or random transcription events.

Highlights

  • The genome is pervasively transcribed but most transcripts do not code for proteins, constituting non-protein-coding RNAs

  • We showed that a large set of long non-protein-coding RNA (ncRNA) (lncRNA) of diverse properties are differentially expressed in response to these pathways and that up to 87% of the transcriptional response can be non-coding

  • We investigated the evolution of the macroRNA signal transducer and activator of transcription-3 (STAT3)-induced RNA 1 (STAiR1), and found that it contains highly conserved elements, which maintain their spacing during eutherian evolution and partly exhibit RNA secondary structure under stabilizing selection

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Summary

Introduction

The genome is pervasively transcribed but most transcripts do not code for proteins, constituting non-protein-coding RNAs. Despite increasing numbers of functional reports of individual long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs), assessing the extent of functionality among the non-coding transcriptional output of mammalian cells remains intricate. In the protein-coding world, transcripts differentially expressed in the context of processes essential for the survival of multicellular organisms have been instrumental in the discovery of functionally relevant proteins and their deregulation is frequently associated with diseases. We systematically identified lncRNAs expressed differentially in response to oncologically relevant processes and cell-cycle, p53 and STAT3 pathways, using tiling arrays. Transcriptomics has shown that the majority of sequences in mammalian genomes are pervasively transcribed into RNA molecules [1,2,3,4,5,6], an overwhelming fraction of which is not translated [7]. The question to what extent pervasive transcription – either by the actions of the transcripts produced or by the process of transcription itself – is of functional relevance, currently remains unanswered

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