A cellular function for the RNA-interference enzyme Dicer in the maturation of the let-7 small temporal RNA
- PMID: 11452083
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1062961
A cellular function for the RNA-interference enzyme Dicer in the maturation of the let-7 small temporal RNA
Abstract
The 21-nucleotide small temporal RNA (stRNA) let-7 regulates developmental timing in Caenorhabditis elegans and probably in other bilateral animals. We present in vivo and in vitro evidence that in Drosophila melanogaster a developmentally regulated precursor RNA is cleaved by an RNA interference-like mechanism to produce mature let-7 stRNA. Targeted destruction in cultured human cells of the messenger RNA encoding the enzyme Dicer, which acts in the RNA interference pathway, leads to accumulation of the let-7 precursor. Thus, the RNA interference and stRNA pathways intersect. Both pathways require the RNA-processing enzyme Dicer to produce the active small-RNA component that represses gene expression.
Comment in
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Development. Dicing up RNAs.Science. 2001 Aug 3;293(5531):811-3. doi: 10.1126/science.1064400. Science. 2001. PMID: 11486075 No abstract available.
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