Abstract

Background

Endogenous non-coding small RNAs (21-24 nt) play an important role in post-transcriptional gene regulation in plants. Domestication selection is the most important evolutionary force in shaping crop genomes. The extent of polymorphism at small RNA loci in domesticated rice and whether small RNA loci are targets of domestication selection have not yet been determined.

Results

A polymorphism survey of 94 small RNA loci (88 MIRNAs, four TAS3 loci and two miRNA-like long hairpins) was conducted in domesticated rice, generating 2 Mb of sequence data. Many mutations (substitution or insertion/deletion) were observed at small RNA loci in domesticated rice, e.g. 12 mutation sites were observed in the mature miRNA sequences of 11 MIRNAs (12.5% of the investigated MIRNAs). Several small RNA loci showed significant signals for positive selection and/or potential domestication selection.

Conclusions

Sequence variation at miRNAs and other small RNAs is higher than expected in domesticated rice. Like protein-coding genes, non-coding small RNA loci could be targets of domestication selection and play an important role in rice domestication and improvement.

Details

Title
Sequence variation and selection of small RNAs in domesticated rice
Author
Wang, Yu; Shen, Dan; Shiping Bo; Chen, Huan; Zheng, Jian; Qian-Hao, Zhu; Cai, Daguang; Helliwell, Chris; Fan, Longjiang
Pages
1-10
Section
Research article
Publication year
2010
Publication date
2010
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
14712148
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2955186954
Copyright
© 2010. This work is licensed under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.