Abstract

Thousands of mammalian messenger RNAs are under selective pressure to maintain 7-nucleotide sites matching microRNAs (miRNAs). We found that these conserved targets are often highly expressed at developmental stages before miRNA expression and that their levels tend to fall as the miRNA that targets them begins to accumulate. Nonconserved sites, which outnumber the conserved sites 10 to 1, also mediate repression. As a consequence, genes preferentially expressed at the same time and place as a miRNA have evolved to selectively avoid sites matching the miRNA. This phenomenon of selective avoidance extends to thousands of genes and enables spatial and temporal specificities of miRNAs to be revealed by finding tissues and developmental stages in which messages with corresponding sites are expressed at lower levels.

Keywords

microRNAPsychological repressionBiologyGeneMessenger RNAGeneticsRegulation of gene expressionGene expressionComputational biologyConserved sequenceBase sequence

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Publication Info

Year
2005
Type
article
Volume
310
Issue
5755
Pages
1817-1821
Citations
1488
Access
Closed

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Kyle Kai‐How Farh, Andrew Grimson, Calvin Jan et al. (2005). The Widespread Impact of Mammalian MicroRNAs on mRNA Repression and Evolution. Science , 310 (5755) , 1817-1821. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1121158

Identifiers

DOI
10.1126/science.1121158