Highly complementary target RNAs promote release of guide RNAs from human Argonaute2

Authors
De N, Young L, Lau PW, Meisner NC, Morrissey DV, MacRae IJ.
09-18-2013
12:00pm
PST
Categories
RNA Turnover
Speaker
D'Juan Farmer
Abstract
Argonaute proteins use small RNAs to guide the silencing of complementary target RNAs in many eukaryotes. Although small RNA biogenesis pathways are well studied, mechanisms for removal of guide RNAs from Argonaute are poorly understood. Here we show that the Argonaute2 (Ago2) guide RNA complex is extremely stable, with a half-life on the order of days. However, highly complementary target RNAs destabilize the complex and significantly accelerate release of the guide RNA from Ago2. This ‘‘unloading’’ activity can be enhanced by mismatches between the target and the guide 50 end and attenuated by mismatches to the guide 30 end. The introduction of 30 mismatches leads to more potent silencing of abundant mRNAs in mammalian cells. These findings help to explain why the 30 ends of mammalian microRNAs (miRNAs) rarely match their targets, suggest a mechanism for sequence-specific small RNA turnover, and offer insights for controlling small RNAs in mammalian cells.