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Scientists
discover new class of RNA
January 11, 2007
A
team of scientists led by MIT professor David Bartel has
discovered a new class of RNA molecules, termed 21U-RNAs,
while studying the C. elegans worm, above.
Photo
Credit: NIH
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The last few years have
been very good to ribonucleic acid (RNA). Decades after DNA took
biology by storm, RNA was considered little more than a link in a
chain--no doubt a necessary link, but one that, by itself, had
little to offer. But with the discoveries of RNA interference and
microRNAs, this meager molecule has been catapulted to stardom as
a major player in genomic activity.
Now, a team of scientists led
by David Bartel, a professor in MIT's Department of Biology, has
discovered an entirely new class of RNA molecules.
Reporting in the journal Cell,
the team describes identifying more than 5,000 of these new
molecules, termed 21U-RNAs, in the C. elegans worm. These new
RNAs are named after their distinctive features: Each molecule
contains 21 chemical building blocks (or nucleotides), and each
begins with the chemical uridine, represented by the letter U
(the only RNA nucleotide not also found on DNA). In addition,
each of the 5,000 different 21U-RNA molecules comes from one of
two chromosomal regions.
Further, "we can predict
where additional 21U-RNA genes might reside," says Bartel,
who is also a member of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical
Research and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.
"Combining these predictions with the 5,000 (21U-RNAs) that
we experimentally identified, we suspect that there are more than
12,000 different 21U-RNA genes in the genome." Because each
gene typically produces a unique 21U-RNA, a very large diversity
of molecules is made.
"There are so many 21U-RNA
genes spread out over such a wide swath of the genome, but they
all share common requirements for expression and common
structural features," says Bartel lab Ph.D. student J.
Graham Ruby, lead author on the paper.
Although the researchers
haven't yet identified a particular function for these molecules,
they believe that this uniform structure strongly indicates an
important role.
MIT Institute Professor and
Nobel Laureate Phillip Sharp, a biologist who was not part of the
research team, supports this hypothesis. The fact that 21U-RNAs
share this "common structure and origin suggests an
important function," he says. "It requires function to
conserve specificity."
Other members of the research
team are affiliated with the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
and Pennsylvania State University. This research was supported by
the Prix Louis D from the Institut de France and a grant from the
National Institutes of Health.
Source
/ Credit: MIT / David Cameron, Whitehead Institute
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