Abstract

MicroRNAs are key regulators of gene expression, but the precise mechanisms underlying their interaction with their mRNA targets are still poorly understood. Here, we systematically investigate the role of target-site accessibility, as determined by base-pairing interactions within the mRNA, in microRNA target recognition. We experimentally show that mutations diminishing target accessibility substantially reduce microRNA-mediated translational repression, with effects comparable to those of mutations that disrupt sequence complementarity. We devise a parameter-free model for microRNA-target interaction that computes the difference between the free energy gained from the formation of the microRNA-target duplex and the energetic cost of unpairing the target to make it accessible to the microRNA. This model explains the variability in our experiments, predicts validated targets more accurately than existing algorithms, and shows that genomes accommodate site accessibility by preferentially positioning targets in highly accessible regions. Our study thus demonstrates that target accessibility is a critical factor in microRNA function.

Keywords

microRNABiologyComplementarity (molecular biology)Computational biologyDuplex (building)GeneticsPsychological repressionFunction (biology)GeneGene expressionDNA

MeSH Terms

AnimalsBinding SitesCaenorhabditis elegansDrosophilaHumansMiceMicroRNAsModelsBiologicalNucleic Acid ConformationRNAMessengerThermodynamics

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2007
Type
article
Volume
39
Issue
10
Pages
1278-1284
Citations
2454
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

2454
OpenAlex
148
Influential
2070
CrossRef

Cite This

Michael A. Kertesz, Nicola Iovino, Ulrich Unnerstall et al. (2007). The role of site accessibility in microRNA target recognition. Nature Genetics , 39 (10) , 1278-1284. https://doi.org/10.1038/ng2135

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/ng2135
PMID
17893677

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%