The evolutionary history and functional specialization of microRNA genes inArabidopsis halleriandA. lyrata

Author:

Pavan FlaviaORCID,Azevedo Favory JacintheORCID,Lacoste Eléanore,Beaumont ChloéORCID,Louis Firas,Blassiau Christelle,Cruaud CorinneORCID,Labadie KarineORCID,Gallina SophieORCID,Genete MathieuORCID,Kumar VinodORCID,Kramer UteORCID,Batista Rita A.ORCID,Patiou Claire,Debacker Laurence,Ponitzki Chloé,Houzé Esther,Durand EléonoreORCID,Aury Jean-MarcORCID,Castric VincentORCID,Legrand SylvainORCID

Abstract

AbstractMicroRNAs (miRNAs) are a class of small non-coding RNAs that play important regulatory roles in plant genomes. While some miRNA genes are deeply conserved, the majority appear to be species-specific, raising the question of how they emerge and integrate into cellular regulatory networks. To better understand this, we first performed a detailed annotation of miRNA genes in the closely related plantsArabidopsis halleriandA. lyrataand evaluated their phylogenetic conservation across 87 plant species. We then characterized the process by which newly emerged miRNA genes progressively acquire the properties of “canonical” miRNA genes, in terms of size and stability of the hairpin precursor, loading of their cleavage products into Argonaute proteins, and potential to regulate downstream target genes. Nucleotide polymorphism was lower in the mature miRNA sequence than in the other parts of the hairpin (stem, terminal loop), and the regions of coding sequences targeted by miRNAs also had reduced diversity as compared to their neighboring regions along the genes. These patterns were less pronounced for recently emerged than for evolutionarily conserved miRNA genes, suggesting a weaker selective constraint on the most recent miRNA genes. Our results illustrate the rapid birth-and-death of miRNA genes in plant genomes, and provide a detailed picture of the evolutionary processes by which a small fraction of them eventually integrate into “core” biological processes.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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