Abstract

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small non-coding RNAs that mediate post-transcriptional gene silencing. Over 700 human miRNAs have currently been identified, many of which are mutated or de-regulated in diseases. Here we report the identification of novel miRNAs through deep sequencing the small RNAome (<30 nt) of over 100 tissues or cell lines derived from human female reproductive organs in both normal and disease states. These specimens include ovarian epithelium and ovarian cancer, endometrium and endometriomas, and uterine myometrium and uterine smooth muscle tumors. Sequence reads not aligning with known miRNAs were each mapped to the genome to extract flanking sequences. These extended sequence regions were folded in silico to identify RNA hairpins. Sequences demonstrating the ability to form a stem loop structure with low minimum free energy (<−25 kcal) and predicted Drosha and Dicer cut sites yielding a mature miRNA sequence matching the actual sequence were considered putative novel miRNAs. Additional confidence was achieved when putative novel hairpins assembled a collection of sequences highly similar to the putative mature miRNA but with heterogeneous 3′-ends. A confirmed novel miRNA fulfilled these criteria and had its “star” sequence in our collection. We found 7 distinct confirmed novel miRNAs, and 51 additional novel miRNAs that represented highly confident predictions but without detectable star sequences. Our novel miRNAs were detectable in multiple samples, but expressed at low levels and not specific to any one tissue or cell type. To date, this study represents the largest set of samples analyzed together to identify novel miRNAs.

Highlights

  • IntroductionMicroRNAs (miRNAs) are short (,22-nucleotide), singlestranded, non-coding RNAs that modulate gene expression

  • MicroRNAs are short (,22-nucleotide), singlestranded, non-coding RNAs that modulate gene expression

  • We focused on novel miRNA discovery and have confidently identified both mature and star sequences for 7 previously unknown miRNAs using our deep sequencing data

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Summary

Introduction

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are short (,22-nucleotide), singlestranded, non-coding RNAs that modulate gene expression. Through their binding to the 39-UTR (untranslated region) of target mRNAs, miRNAs trigger either the degradation of the mRNA transcript or the inhibition of protein translation. MiRNAs are initially transcribed as primary microRNAs (pri-miRNAs) and undergo two processing steps. The first step is the generation, within the nucleus, of stem-loop precursors (pre-miRNAs ,70 nt) by the enzyme Drosha. The pre-miRNAs are exported into the cytoplasm and processed by the enzyme Dicer into a double stranded RNA duplex with two nucleotide 39-. The number of miRNAs confidently identified in the human genome is currently over 700 (703 in miRBase v13.0). Though the actual number of miRNAs is not known, some in silico studies suggest as many as tens of thousands of miRNAs exist [11]

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