Identification, expression, and molecular evolution of microRNAs in the 'living fossil' Triops cancriformis (tadpole shrimp)
Autor: | Kiriko Hiraoka, Kahori T. Ikeda, Akio Kanai, Kosuke Fujishima, Yuka Hirose, Emiko Noro, Masaru Tomita |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
Genetics
Ribonuclease III Small RNA Base Sequence Piwi-interacting RNA Molecular Sequence Annotation Articles Biology biology.organism_classification Deep sequencing Conserved sequence Triops cancriformis Evolution Molecular MicroRNAs Phylogenetics Molecular evolution Crustacea Multigene Family Argonaute Proteins Animals Transcriptome Molecular Biology Living fossil Conserved Sequence Phylogeny |
Popis: | MicroRNAs have been identified and analyzed in various model species, but an investigation of miRNAs in nonmodel species is required for a more complete understanding of miRNA evolution. In this study, we investigated the miRNAs of the nonmodel species Triops cancriformis (tadpole shrimp), a “living fossil,” whose morphological form has not changed in almost 200 million years. Dramatic ontogenetic changes occur during its development. To clarify the evolution of miRNAs, we comparatively analyzed its miRNAs and the components of its RNAi machinery. We used deep sequencing to analyze small RNA libraries from the six different developmental stages of T. cancriformis (egg, first–fourth instars, and adult), and also analyzed its genomic DNA with deep sequencing. We identified 180 miRNAs (87 conserved miRNAs and 93 novel candidate miRNAs), and deduced the components of its RNAi machinery: the DICER1, AGO1–3, PIWI, and AUB proteins. A comparative miRNA analysis of T. cancriformis and Drosophila melanogaster showed inconsistencies in the expression patterns of four conserved miRNAs. This suggests that although the miRNA sequences of the two species are very similar, their roles differ across the species. An miRNA conservation analysis revealed that most of the conserved T. cancriformis miRNAs share sequence similarities with those of arthropods, although T. cancriformis is called a “living fossil.” However, we found that let-7 and DICER1 of T. cancriformis are more similar to those of the vertebrates than to those of the arthropods. These results suggest that miRNA systems of T. cancriformis have evolved in a unique fashion. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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