RNA Maps Reveal New RNA Classes and a Possible Function for Pervasive Transcription

2007 Science 2,523 citations

Abstract

Significant fractions of eukaryotic genomes give rise to RNA, much of which is unannotated and has reduced protein-coding potential. The genomic origins and the associations of human nuclear and cytosolic polyadenylated RNAs longer than 200 nucleotides (nt) and whole-cell RNAs less than 200 nt were investigated in this genome-wide study. Subcellular addresses for nucleotides present in detected RNAs were assigned, and their potential processing into short RNAs was investigated. Taken together, these observations suggest a novel role for some unannotated RNAs as primary transcripts for the production of short RNAs. Three potentially functional classes of RNAs have been identified, two of which are syntenically conserved and correlate with the expression state of protein-coding genes. These data support a highly interleaved organization of the human transcriptome.

Keywords

PolyadenylationSmall nucleolar RNABiologyRNANon-coding RNALong non-coding RNATranscriptomeGenomeGeneGeneticsComputational biologyTranscription (linguistics)Tiling arrayGene expression

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Publication Info

Year
2007
Type
article
Volume
316
Issue
5830
Pages
1484-1488
Citations
2523
Access
Closed

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Philipp Kapranov, Jill Cheng, Sujit Dike et al. (2007). RNA Maps Reveal New RNA Classes and a Possible Function for Pervasive Transcription. Science , 316 (5830) , 1484-1488. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1138341

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DOI
10.1126/science.1138341