Analysis on RNA Motif-Based RNA Trafficking in Plants

2021 ◽  
pp. 29-37
Author(s):  
Heather N. Smith ◽  
Junfei Ma ◽  
Ying Wang
Keyword(s):  
2004 ◽  
Vol 16 (7) ◽  
pp. 1741-1752 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yijun Qi ◽  
Thierry Pélissier ◽  
Asuka Itaya ◽  
Elizabeth Hunt ◽  
Michael Wassenegger ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Di Liu ◽  
Yaming Shao ◽  
Joseph A. Piccirilli ◽  
Yossi Weizmann

<p>Though advances in nanotechnology have enabled the construction of synthetic nucleic acid based nanoarchitectures with ever-increasing complexity for various applications, high-resolution structures are lacking due to the difficulty of obtaining good diffracting crystals. Here we report the design of RNA nanostructures based on homooligomerizable tiles from an RNA single-strand for X-ray determination. Three structures are solved to near-atomic resolution: a 2D parallelogram, an unexpectedly formed 3D nanobracelet, and a 3D nanocage. Structural details of their constituent motifs—such as kissing loops, branched kissing-loops and T-junctions—that resemble natural RNA motifs and resisted X-ray determination are revealed. This work unveils the largely unexplored potential of crystallography in gaining high-resolution feedback for nanostructure design and suggests a novel route to investigate RNA motif structures by configuring them into nanoarchitectures.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Agirre ◽  
A. J. Oldfield ◽  
N. Bellora ◽  
A. Segelle ◽  
R. F. Luco

AbstractAlternative splicing relies on the combinatorial recruitment of splicing regulators to specific RNA binding sites. Chromatin has been shown to impact this recruitment. However, a limited number of histone marks have been studied at a global level. In this work, a machine learning approach, applied to extensive epigenomics datasets in human H1 embryonic stem cells and IMR90 foetal fibroblasts, has identified eleven chromatin modifications that differentially mark alternatively spliced exons depending on the level of exon inclusion. These marks act in a combinatorial and position-dependent way, creating characteristic splicing-associated chromatin signatures (SACS). In support of a functional role for SACS in coordinating splicing regulation, changes in the alternative splicing of SACS-marked exons between ten different cell lines correlate with changes in SACS enrichment levels and recruitment of the splicing regulators predicted by RNA motif search analysis. We propose the dynamic nature of chromatin modifications as a mechanism to rapidly fine-tune alternative splicing when necessary.


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