scholarly journals Computational Discovery of a miRNA and its Putative Target Genes in Ziziphus Jujuba using Genome-wide Expressed Sequence Tags

Author(s):  
Salpadoruge Sanjana Supun Tharaka Fernando ◽  
Mohamed Cassim Mohamed Zakeel ◽  
Mohamed Ismail Sithy Safeena

Abstract Background Ziziphus jujuba is an important fruit crop which is increasingly becoming popular among consumers due to its medicinal properties. Increasing worldwide demand for the fruit poses new challenges to the industry which includes the need for accelerated cultivar development of jujubes. To embark on cultivar development with improved traits such as high yield and disease resistance, molecular and conventional breeding, and genetic engineering become imperative. But inadequate trait-enhancing alleles or gene pleiotropism limit the direct use of several identified genes. To overcome these issues, microRNAs (miRNAs) can be utilized in breeding of jujubes as genetic modulators to fine-tune the regulation of gene expression, thus the discovery of miRNAs becomes important. Methods and results In this study using a computational approach, we identified one potential miRNA (zju-miR-215-3p) from 2904 expressed sequence tags. The miRNA showed down regulation of five target proteins (AP-2 complex subunit alpha, C2H2-type domain-containing protein, sentrin-specific protease 1, hydrolase_4 domain-containing protein and putative alpha-ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase) and their suppression appears to be helpful to the plant to overcome stress conditions. Conclusion The miRNA identified in this study is associated with five potential target proteins, most of which are implicated in metabolic and developmental processes associated with plant growth and reproduction. Future studies are necessary to validate the miRNA by RNA sequencing and to confirm the molecular functions of the down regulations of target proteins.

Gene ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 537 (2) ◽  
pp. 333-342 ◽  
Author(s):  
Debashis Panda ◽  
Budheswar Dehury ◽  
Jagajjit Sahu ◽  
Madhumita Barooah ◽  
Priyabrata Sen ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Suyun Wei ◽  
Ning Ye ◽  
Tongming Yin

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) belong to a class of small, noncoding, and endogenous single-stranded RNAs that negatively regulate gene expression at the posttranscriptional level. Potential miRNAs can be identified based on sequence homology since miRNAs are highly conserved in plants. In this study, we aligned the expressed sequence tags derived from flower buds of male and female S. suchowensis to miRNAs in the miRBase, which enable us to identify 34 potential miRNAs from flower buds of the alternate sexes. Among them, 11 were from the female and 23 were from the male. Analyzing sequence complementarity led to identification of 124 and 55 miRNA targets in the male and female flower buds, respectively. By mapping the target genes of the predicted miRNAs to the sequence assemblies of S. suchowensis, a miR156 mediated gene was detected at the gender locus of willow, which was a transcription factor involved in flower development. It is noteworthy that this target is not expressed in male flower, while it is expressed fairly highly in female flower based on the transcriptome data derived from the alternate sexes of willows. This study provides new bioinformatic clue for further exploring the genetic mechanism underlying gender determination in willows.


Helia ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 42 (71) ◽  
pp. 173-186
Author(s):  
Ana Laura Martínez ◽  
Freda Anderson ◽  
Facundo Quiroz ◽  
Antonio Garayalde ◽  
Ignacio Erreguerena ◽  
...  

Abstract The objective of this work was to find practical procedures to overcome methodological drawbacks encountered during studies on sunflower downy mildew. Techniques for recovering living isolates of Plasmopara halstedii from the field and for the preservation of infected leaf samples for further molecular analysis were developed. A Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)-based test for the detection of P. halstedii in sunflower leaves and a method to remove azoxystrobin from fungicide-treated seeds are proposed. In situ-inoculations of pre-germinated seeds allowed the recovery of living isolates from the field. Three sample-preservation methods were evaluated (silica, heating and lyophilization) resulting in high yield and quality of the DNA extract. It was detected the presence of the pathogen in symptomless leaves through PCR using molecular markers based on expressed sequence tags. A treatment using sodium hypochlorite is recommended for the removal of azoxystrobin from fungicide treated seeds.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document