Abstract

In the past 2 decades, the discovery of a new class of small RNAs, known as tRNA-derived fragments (tRFs), shed light on a new layer of regulation implicated in many biological processes. tRFs originate from mature tRNAs and are classified according to the tRNA regions that they derive from, namely 3′tRF, 5′tRF, and tRF-halves. Additionally, another tRF subgroup deriving from tRNA precursors has been reported, the 3′U tRFs. tRF length ranges from 17 to 26 nt for the 3′and 5′tRFs, and from 30 to 40 nt for tRF-halves. tRF biogenesis is still not yet elucidated, although there is strong evidence that Dicer (and DICER-LIKE) proteins, as well as other RNases such as Angiogenin in mammal and RNS proteins family in plants, are responsible for processing specific tRFs. In plants, the abundance of those molecules varies among tissues, developmental stages, and environmental conditions. More recently, several studies have contributed to elucidate the role that these intriguing molecules may play in all organisms. Among the recent discoveries, tRFs were found to be involved in distinctive regulatory layers, such as transcription and translation regulation, RNA degradation, ribosome biogenesis, stress response, regulatory signaling in plant nodulation, and genome protection against transposable elements. Although tRF biology is still poorly understood, the field has blossomed in the past few years, and this review summarizes the most recent developments in the tRF field in plants.

Highlights

  • Transfer RNA is an ancient non-coding RNA molecule whose canonical role is to bridge the information contained in messenger RNAs to protein synthesis (Giegé, 2008)

  • Arabidopsis RIBONUCLEASE 1 (RNS1) is expressed in specific tissues and RNS1 may be responsible for processing tRNA-derived fragments (tRFs)-halves in specific cell types and developmental stages (Nowacka et al, 2013; Alves et al, 2017; Megel et al, 2018)

  • The RNS family is responsible for processing some tRFs and tRNA-halves (Alves et al, 2017; Megel et al, 2018), but DCL1 might play an important role in the male gamete-specific tRF biogenesis, where they likely help control transposable elements (TEs) and may participate in a miRNA-like pathway (Martinez et al, 2017)

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Summary

Introduction

Transfer RNA (tRNA) is an ancient non-coding RNA molecule whose canonical role is to bridge the information contained in messenger RNAs (mRNAs) to protein synthesis (Giegé, 2008). Arabidopsis RNS1 is expressed in specific tissues and RNS1 may be responsible for processing tRF-halves in specific cell types and developmental stages (Nowacka et al, 2013; Alves et al, 2017; Megel et al, 2018).

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