Exogenous RNAi mechanisms contribute to transcriptome adaptation by phased siRNA clusters in Paramecium

Author:

Karunanithi Sivarajan123ORCID,Oruganti Vidya1,Marker Simone4,Rodriguez-Viana Angela M4,Drews Franziska45,Pirritano Marcello45,Nordström Karl6,Simon Martin45,Schulz Marcel H13

Affiliation:

1. Cluster of Excellence, Multimodal Computing and Interaction, Saarland University and Department for Computational Biology and Applied Algorithmics, Max Planck Institute for Informatics, Saarland Informatics Campus, 66123 Saarbrücken, Germany

2. Graduate School of Computer Science, Saarland Informatics Campus, 66123 Saarbrücken, Germany

3. Institute for Cardiovascular Regeneration, Goethe-University Hospital, 60590 Frankfurt, Germany

4. Molecular Cell Dynamics, Centre for Human and Molecular Biology, Saarland University, 66123 Saarbrücken, Germany

5. Molecular Cell Biology and Microbiology, Wuppertal University, 42097 Wuppertal, Germany

6. Genetics/Epigenetics, Centre for Human and Molecular Biology, Saarland University, 66123 Saarbrücken, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Extensive research has characterized distinct exogenous RNAi pathways interfering in gene expression during vegetative growth of the unicellular model ciliate Paramecium. However, role of RNAi in endogenous transcriptome regulation, and environmental adaptation is unknown. Here, we describe the first genome-wide profiling of endogenous sRNAs in context of different transcriptomic states (serotypes). We developed a pipeline to identify, and characterize 2602 siRNA producing clusters (SRCs). Our data show no evidence that SRCs produce miRNAs, and in contrast to other species, no preference for strand specificity of siRNAs. Interestingly, most SRCs overlap coding genes and a separate group show siRNA phasing along the entire open reading frame, suggesting that the mRNA transcript serves as a source for siRNAs. Integrative analysis of siRNA abundance and gene expression levels revealed surprisingly that mRNA and siRNA show negative as well as positive associations. Two RNA-dependent RNA Polymerase mutants, RDR1 and RDR2, show a drastic loss of siRNAs especially in phased SRCs accompanied with increased mRNA levels. Importantly, most SRCs depend on both RDRs, reminiscent to primary siRNAs in the RNAi against exogenous RNA, indicating mechanistic overlaps between exogenous and endogenous RNAi contributing to flexible transcriptome adaptation.

Funder

DFG

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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