Retinoic Acid-Induced DR2 Alu Transcripts in Stem Cells Generate Functional Small RNAs that Mediate Target mRNA Degradation
Source: NCBI BioProject (ID PRJNA144267)

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Project name: Homo sapiens
Description: While liganded nuclear receptors are well established to regulate Pol II protein-coding transcription units, their role in regulation of DNA repeats remains largely unknown. Here, we report that ~2-3% of the ~1-200,000 human DR2 Alu repeats, particularly those in proximity to retinoic acid-activated Pol II transcription units, are bound and activated by retinoic acid receptor in human embryonic stem cells, triggering their Pol  III-dependent transcription. The non-coding DR2 Alu transcripts are processed in a Dicer-dependent fashion into a series of small RNA products with sizes ranging ~28-65nt and exhibit substantial co-localization with P bodies. These small RNAs cause degradation of a subset of mRNAs critical for the "stem cell" state, which harbor complimentary sequences in their 3' untranslated regions. This regulation requires Ago3- dependent stabilization of full-length and processed DR2 Alu transcripts, and recruitment of Ago3-associated decapping complexes to the target mRNAs. Thus, the RAR/Pol III-dependent DR2 Alu transcriptional program in stem cells serves as a functional complement to the RAR/Pol II-dependent counterpart.Overall design: ChIP-seq of H3K36me3 samples before and after RA (retinoic acid) treatments.
Data type: Epigenomics
Sample scope: Multiisolate
Relevance: Medical
Organization: HHMI/UCSD
Literatures
  1. PMID: 23064648
Last updated: 2011-07-22
Statistics: 2 samples; 2 experiments; 2 runs