Post-Transcriptional Gene Silencing (PTGS) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Post-Transcriptional Gene Silencing (PTGS)

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In plants, fungi, C. elegans & Drosophila, a RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RDR) is involved in the initiation (b) or amplification (c) of silencing (RNAi). – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Post-Transcriptional Gene Silencing (PTGS)


1
Post-Transcriptional Gene Silencing (PTGS)
  • Also called RNA interference or RNAi
  • Process results in down-regulation of a gene at
    the RNA level (i.e., after transcription)
  • There is also gene silencing at the
    transcriptional level (TGS)
  • Examples transposons, retroviral genes,
    heterochromatin

2
  • PTGS is heritable, although it can be modified in
    subsequent cell divisions or generations
  • Ergo, it is an epigenetic phenomenon

Epigenetics - refers to heritable changes in
phenotype or gene expression caused by mechanisms
other than changes in the underlying DNA sequence.
3
Antisense Technology
  • Used from 1980 on, to repress specific genes
  • Alternative to gene knock-outs, which were/are
    very difficult to do in higher plants and animals
  • Theory by introducing an antisense gene (or
    asRNA) into cells, the asRNA would zip up the
    complementary mRNA into a dsRNA that would not
    be translated
  • The antisense effect was highly variable, and
    in light of the discovery of RNAi, asRNA
    probably inhibited its target by inducing RNAi
    rather than inhibiting translation.

4
Discovery of PTGS
  • First discovered in plants
  • (R. Jorgensen, 1990)
  • When Jorgensen introduced a re-engineered gene
    into petunia that had a lot of homology with an
    endogenous petunia gene, both genes became
    suppressed!
  • Also called Co-suppression
  • Suppression was mostly due to increased
    degradation of the mRNAs (from the endogenous and
    introduced genes)

5
Discovery of PTGS (cont.)
  • Involved attempts to manipulate pigment
    synthesis genes in petunia
  • Genes were enzymes of the flavonoid/ anthocyanin
    pathway
  • CHS chalcone synthase
  • DFR dihydroflavonol reductase
  • When these genes were introduced into petunia
    using a strong viral promoter, mRNA levels
    dropped and so did pigment levels in many
    transgenics.

6
Flavonoid/anthocyanin pathway in plants
Strongly pigmented compounds
7
DFR construct introduced into petunia CaMV - 35S
promoter from Cauliflower Mosaic Virus DFR cDNA
cDNA copy of the DFR mRNA (intronless DFR
gene) T Nos - 3 processing signal from the
Nopaline synthase gene
Flowers from 3 different transgenic petunia
plants carrying copies of the chimeric DFR gene
above. The flowers had low DFR mRNA levels in the
non-pigmented areas, but gene was still being
transcribed.
8
  • RNAi discovered in C. elegans (first animal)
    while attempting to use antisense RNA in vivo
  • Craig Mello Andrew Fire (2006 Nobel
    Prize in Physiology Medicine)
  • Control sense RNAs also produced suppression
    of target gene!
  • sense RNAs were contaminated with dsRNA.
  • dsRNA was the suppressing agent.

9
Double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) induced interference
of the Mex-3 mRNA in the nematode C. elegans.
Antisense RNA (c) or dsRNA (d) for the mex-3
(mRNA) was injected into C. elegans ovaries, and
then mex-3 mRNA was detected in embryos by in
situ hybridization with a mex-3 probe. (a)
control embryo (b) control embryo hyb. with mex-3
probe
Conclusions (1) dsRNA reduced mex-3 mRNA better
than antisense mRNA. (2) the suppressing signal
moved from cell to cell.
Fig. 16.29
10
PTGS (RNAi) occurs in wide variety of Eukaryotes
  • Angiosperms
  • Chlamydomonas (unicellular)
  • Mammalian cells
  • C. elegans (nematode)
  • Drosophila
  • Neurospora, but not in Yeast!

11
Mechanism of RNAi Role of Dicer
  • Cells (plants and animals) undergoing RNAi
    contained small fragments (25 nt) of the RNA
    being suppressed.
  • A nuclease (Dicer) was purified from Drosophila
    embryos that still had small RNA fragments
    associated with it, both sense and antisense.
  • The Dicer gene is found in all organisms that
    exhibit RNAi, and mutating it inhibits the RNAi
    effect.
  • Conclusion Dicer is the endonuclease that
    degrades dsRNA into 21-24 nt fragments, and in
    higher eukaryotes also pulls the strands apart
    via intrinsic helicase activity.

12
Model for RNAi
By Dicer
21-23 nt RNAs
ATP-dependent Helicase or Dicer
Active siRNA complexes RISC - contain
Argonaute instead of Dicer
Very efficient process because many small
interfering RNAs (siRNAs) generated from a larger
dsRNA.
Fig. 16.39, 3rd Ed.
13
In plants, fungi, C. elegans Drosophila, a
RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RDR) is involved in
the initiation (b) or amplification (c) of
silencing (RNAi).
CBP and PABP block access for RDR.
PABP missing.
D. Baulcombe 2004 Nature 431356
14
Why RNAi silencing?
  • Most widely held view is that RNAi evolved to
    protect the genome from viruses (and perhaps
    transposons or mobile DNAs).
  • Some viruses have proteins that suppress
    silencing
  • HCPro - first one identified, found in plant
    potyviruses (V. Vance)
  • P19 - tomato bushy stunt virus, binds to siRNAs
    and prevents RISC formation (D. Baulcombe).
  • Tat - RNA-binding protein from HIV

15
Micro RNAs (MiRNAs)
  • Recently, very small (micro) MiRNAs have been
    discovered in plants and animals.
  • They resemble siRNAs, and they regulate specific
    mRNAs by promoting their degradation or
    repressing their translation.
  • New use for the RNAi mechanism besides defense.

16
Comparison of Mechanisms of MiRNA Biogenesis and
Action
DCL1 mutant
Better complementarity of MiRNAs and targets in
plants.
17
Summary of differences between plant and
animal MiRNA systems Plants Animals of
miRNA genes 100-200 100-500 Location in
genome intergenic regions Intergenic regions,
introns Clusters of miRNAs Uncommon
Common MiRNA biosynthesis Dicer-like
Drosha, Dicer Mechanism of repression mRNA
cleavage Translational repression Location of
miRNA target in a gene Predominantly
Predominantly the 3'-UTR the open-reading
frame of miRNA binding sites in a target
gene Generally one Generally
multiple Functions of known target
genes Regulatory genes Regulatory
genescrucial crucial for development, for
development, structural enzymes proteins,
enzymes
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