Cell-type-specific signatures of microRNAs on target mRNA expression
Top Cited Papers
- 13 February 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 103 (8) , 2746-2751
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0511045103
Abstract
Although it is known that the human genome contains hundreds of microRNA (miRNA) genes and that each miRNA can regulate a large number of mRNA targets, the overall effect of miRNAs on mRNA tissue profiles has not been systematically elucidated. Here, we show that predicted human mRNA targets of several highly tissue-specific miRNAs are typically expressed in the same tissue as the miRNA but at significantly lower levels than in tissues where the miRNA is not present. Conversely, highly expressed genes are often enriched in mRNAs that do not have the recognition motifs for the miRNAs expressed in these tissues. Together, our data support the hypothesis that miRNA expression broadly contributes to tissue specificity of mRNA expression in many human tissues. Based on these insights, we apply a computational tool to directly correlate 3′ UTR motifs with changes in mRNA levels upon miRNA overexpression or knockdown. We show that this tool can identify functionally important 3′ UTR motifs without cross-species comparison.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Phylogenetic Shadowing and Computational Identification of Human microRNA GenesCell, 2005
- Conserved Seed Pairing, Often Flanked by Adenosines, Indicates that Thousands of Human Genes are MicroRNA TargetsCell, 2005
- Human MicroRNA TargetsPLoS Biology, 2004
- The functions of animal microRNAsNature, 2004
- A gene atlas of the mouse and human protein-encoding transcriptomesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2004
- MicroRNAsCell, 2004
- Genome-Wide Survey of Human Alternative Pre-mRNA Splicing with Exon Junction MicroarraysScience, 2003
- Expression profiling reveals off-target gene regulation by RNAiNature Biotechnology, 2003
- Regulatory element detection using correlation with expressionNature Genetics, 2001
- The Nonamer UUAUUUAUU Is the Key AU-Rich Sequence Motif That Mediates mRNA DegradationMolecular and Cellular Biology, 1995