Abstract

BackgroundSmall nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) are an abundant class of noncoding RNAs present in all eukaryotes and best known for their involvement in ribosome biogenesis. In mammalian genomes, many snoRNAs exist in multiple copies, resulting from recombination and retrotransposition from an ancestral snoRNA. To gain insight into snoRNA copy regulation, we used Rfam classification and normal human tissue expression datasets generated using low structure bias RNA-seq to characterize snoRNA families.ResultsWe found that although box H/ACA families are on average larger than box C/D families, the number of expressed members is similar for both types. Family members can cover a wide range of average abundance values, but importantly, expression variability of individual members of a family is preferred over the total variability of the family, especially for box H/ACA snoRNAs, suggesting that while members are likely differentially regulated, mechanisms exist to ensure uniformity of the total family abundance across tissues. Box C/D snoRNA family members are mostly embedded in the same host gene while box H/ACA family members tend to be encoded in more than one different host, supporting a model in which box C/D snoRNA duplication occurred mostly by cis recombination while box H/ACA snoRNA families have gained copy members through retrotransposition. And unexpectedly, snoRNAs encoded in the same host gene can be regulated independently, as some snoRNAs within the same family vary in abundance in a divergent way between tissues.ConclusionsSnoRNA copy regulation affects family sizes, genomic location of the members and controls simultaneously member and total family abundance to respond to the needs of individual tissues.

Highlights

  • Small nucleolar RNAs are an abundant class of noncoding RNAs present in all eukaryotes and best known for their involvement in ribosome biogenesis

  • We found striking and subtle differences between box C/D and box H/ACA snoRNA families regarding, amongst others, the number of family members, their genomic location and their conservation, which led us to hypothesize that box C/D and box H/ACA families have evolved in a different manner

  • We took into consideration the level of expression of snoRNA family members

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Summary

Introduction

Small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) are an abundant class of noncoding RNAs present in all eukaryotes and best known for their involvement in ribosome biogenesis. Small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) are a conserved, abundant and repetitive type of noncoding RNA present in all eukaryotes and a subset of archaea [1,2,3]. Bergeron et al BMC Genomics (2021) 22:414 by the presence of boxes C (RUGAUGA) and D (CUGA), respectively found near the 5′ and 3′ ends of the molecule and interacting through non-canonical base pairing forming a kink-turn (Fig. 1A) [6,7,8,9]. Additional boxes, C′ and D′, with same consensus sequences as boxes C and D respectively, but often less well conserved are found in the middle of the molecule [5, 9]. In contrast to box C/D snoRNAs, box H/ACA snoRNAs are longer

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