Author:
Jin Qile,Feng Xuezhu,Hong Minjie,Wang Ke,Chen Xiangyang,Cheng Jiewei,Kuang Yan,Si Xiaoyue,Xu Mingjing,Huang Xinya,Guang Shouhong,Zhu Chengming
Abstract
AbstractThe centrosome is the microtubule-organizing center and a crucial part of cell division. Centrosomal RNAs (cnRNAs) have been reported to enable precise spatiotemporal control of gene expression during cell division in many species. Whether and how cnRNAs exist inC. elegansare unclear. Here, using the nuclear RNAi Argonaute protein NRDE-3 as a reporter, we observed potential peri-centrosome localized small interfering (si)RNAs inC. elegans. NRDE-3 was previously shown to associate with pre-mRNAs and pre-rRNAs via a process involving the presence of complementary siRNAs. We generated a GFP-NRDE-3 knock-in transgene through CRISPR/Cas9 technology and observed that NRDE-3 formed peri-centrosomal foci neighboring the tubulin protein TBB-2, other centriole proteins and pericentriolar material (PCM) components inC. elegansembryos. The peri-centrosomal accumulation of NRDE-3 depends on RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRP)-synthesized 22G siRNAs and the PAZ domain of NRDE-3, which is essential for siRNA binding. Mutation oferi-1, ergo-1, ordrh-3significantly increased the percentage of pericentrosome-enriched NRDE-3. At the metaphase of the cell cycle, NRDE-3 was enriched in both the peri-centrosomal region and the spindle. Moreover, the integrity of centriole proteins and pericentriolar material (PCM) components is also required for the peri-centrosomal accumulation of NRDE-3. Therefore, we concluded that siRNAs could accumulate in the peri-centrosomal region inC. elegansand suggested that the peri-centrosomal region may also be a platform for RNAi-mediated gene regulation.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory