Affiliation:
1. National Demonstration Center for Experimental Fisheries Science Education, Shanghai Ocean University
Abstract
Abstract
Background
A considerable fraction of miRNAs are highly conserved, and certain miRNAs correspond to genomic clusters. The clustering of microRNAs can be advantageous, possibly by allowing coordinated expression. However, little is known about the evolutionary forces responsible for the loss and acquisition of microRNA and microRNA clusters.
Results
The results demonstrated that several novel miRNAs arose throughout grass carp evolution. Duplication and de novo production were critical strategies for miRNA cluster formation. Duplicates accounted for a smaller fraction of the expansion in the grass carp miRNA than de novo creation. Clustered miRNAs are more conserved and change slower, whereas unique miRNAs usually have high evolution rates and low expression levels. The expression level of miRNA expression in clusters is strongly correlated.
Conclusions
This study examines the genomic distribution, evolutionary background, and expression regulation of grass carp microRNAs. Our findings provide novel insights into the genesis and development of microRNA clusters in teleost.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC