- Docente: Alberto Danielli
- Credits: 3
- SSD: BIO/11
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Bologna
- Corso: Second cycle degree programme (LS) in Industrial Molecular Biotechnologies (cod. 0444)
Learning outcomes
With few exceptions, RNA has for a long time been merely regarded
as a molecule that can either function as messenger (mRNA), or as
part of the translation machinery (tRNA, rRNA). Recent findings in
small RNA biology have demonstrated that these versatile molecules
do not only play key roles in many important biological processess
like splicing, editing, etc, but also can act catalytically,
illuminating a staggering wealth of novel molecular mechanisms
which regulate gene expression at the post-transcriptional level,
in all kingdoms of life.
In eukaryotes, RNA interference (RNAi) has become a standard
experimental tool and its therapeutic potential is being
aggressively harnessed. Understanding the structure and function of
small RNAs, such as siRNA and miRNAs, that trigger RNAi and inhibit
translation, has highlighted the assembly and function of the
RNA-induced silencing complex RISC, providing new basic mechanisms
of regulation, as well as guidelines to efficiently silence genes
for biological research and therapeutic applications.
In bacteria, small RNAs are potent and multifunctional regulators,
allowing new signalling pathways to cross-regulate targets
independently of the transcriptional signals, introducing polarity
within operons, modulating virulence, and explaining some puzzles
in well studied regulatory-circuits.
These findings have profoundly changed our perception about how
gene expression is regulated. This course aims to address the
molecular biology of small regulatory RNAs, providing students with
fundaments and cutting edge notions underlying one of the major
paradigm shifts of modern biology.
Course contents
Introduction
Small, non-coding RNAs: a major paradigm shift in gene regulation.
History, biological significance, implications, perspectives.
Fundaments
Analysis and discussion of seminal research articles describing the
occurrence and the mechanisms underlying gene silencing mediated by
small non-coding RNAs.
Insights
- Molecular mechanisms involved in small RNA processing and
recognition: Drosha, Pasha, nuclear export, DICER, RISC assembly
and function, strand recognition, comparison between siRNA and
miRNA pathways, etc;
- Mechanisms of protein synthesis repression by miRNAs;
- P-bodies: mRNA purgatory;
- Silencing amplification in plants and C. elegans
- RNAi in the formation of heterochromatin;
- PIWIs & piRNAs: transposon silencing in the germline
genome;
- Mirtrons
- Repression of the host immune response by viral ncRNAs
- Small regulatory RNAs in bacteria: early days, modern times,
biological function, molecular mechanisms, Fur, RhyB, Hfq,
etc;
- Provoking hypotheses and curiosities: 20K ORFs vs 30K
miRNAs, aRNAs, RNAi screens, etc.
Readings/Bibliography
Fundaments
RNAi
Guo and Kemphues (1995). par-1, a gene required for establishing
polarity in C. elegans embryos, encodes a putative Ser/Thr kinase
that is asimmetrically distributed. Cell 81, 611-620.
Fire et al. (1998). Potent and specific genetic interference by
double-stranded RNA in Caenorhabditis elegans. Nature 391,
806-811
Zamore et al (2000). RNAi: Double-Stranded RNA Directs the
ATP-Dependent Cleavage of mRNA at 21 to 23 Nucleoide Intervals.
Cell 101, 25-33
Berstein et al (2001). Role for a bidentate ribonuclease in the
initiation step of RNA interference. Nature 409, 363-366
miRNA
Lee et al (1993). The C. elegans Heterochronic Gene lin-4 Encodes
Small RNAs with Antisense Complementarity to lin-14. Cell 75,
843-854
Reinhart et al (2000). The 21-nucleotide let-7 RNA regulates
developmental timing in Caenorhabditis elegans. Nature 403,
901-906
Tuschl/Bartel/Ambros Labs (2001). Identification of Novel Genes
Coding for Small Expressed RNAs / An abundant class of Tiny RNAs
with Probable Regulatory Roles in Caenorhabditis elegans / An
Extensive Class of Small RNAs in Caenorhabditis elegans. Science
294, 853-864
Quelling
Cogoni et al. (1996). Transgene silencing of the al-1 gene in
vegetative cells of Neurospora is mediated by a cytoplasmic
effector and does not depend on DNA-DNA interactions or DNA
methylation. EMBO J. 15, 3153-3163.
Cogoni and Macino (1997). Isolation of quelling-defective (qde)
mutants impaired in posttranscriptional transgene-induced gene
silencing in Neurospora crassa. PNAS 94, 10233-10238.
Really New Advances. The Economist Jun 14th 2007. Traduzione Nuovi
Paradigmi Internazionale 701, Jul 13th 2007, 48-51
Insights
Molcular mechanisms involved in recognition and processing
Microprocessor complex
Gregory et al (2004). The microprocessor complex mediates the
genesis of of microRNAs. Nature 432, 235-240.
Denli et al (2004). Processing of primary microRNAs by the
microprocessor complex. Nature 432, 231-235.
Han et al (2006). Molecular basis for the recognition of primary
microRNAs by the Drosha-DGCR8 complex. Cell 125, 887-901.
Export
Yi et al. (2003). Exportin-5 mediates the nuclear export of
pre-microRNAs and short hairpin RNAs. Genes Dev. 17,
3011-3016.
Dicers
Lee et al (2004). Distinct roles for Drosophila Dicer-1 and
Dicer-2 in the siRNA/miRNA silencing pathways. Cell, 117,
69-81.
Pham et al (2004). A Dicer-2-Dependent 80S Complex Cleaves Targeted
mRNAs during RNAi in Drosophila. Cell 117, 83-94.
Tijsterman and Plasterk (2004). Dicers at RISC: The Mechanism of
RNAi. Cell 117, 1-4.
Argonauti
Liu et al (2004). Argonaute 2 is the catalytic engine of mammalian
RNAi Science 305, 1437-1441
Song et al (2004). Cristal structure of Argonaute and its
implications for RISC silencer activities. Science 305,
1434-1437
Okamura et al (2004). Distinct roles for Argonaute proteins in
small RNA-directed RNA cleavage pathways. Genes Dev. 18,
1655-1666.
Förstemann et al (2007). Drosophila microRNAs Are Sorted
into Functionally Distinct Argonaute Complexes after Production by
Dicer-1. Cell 130, 287-297.
Tomari et al (2007). Sorting of Drosophila Small Silencing
RNAs. Cell 130, 299-308.
RISC
Schwarz et al. (2003). Asymmetry in the assembly of the RNAi enzyme
complex. Cell 115, 199-208.
Khvorova et al. (2003). Functional siRNAs and miRNAs exhibit strand
bias. Cell 115, 209-216.
Haley and Zamore (2004). Kinetic analysis of the RNAi enzyme
complex. Nature Struct. Mol. Biol. 11, 599 - 606.
Matranga et al (2005). Passenger-strand cleavage facilitate
assembly of siRNA into Ago2-containing RNAi enzyme complexes. Cell
123, 607-620.
Rand et al. (2005). Argonaute 2 cleaves the anti-guide strand of
siRNA during RISC activation. Cell 123, 621-629.
Gregory et al (2005). Human RISC Couples microRNA Biogenesis and
Posttranscriptional Gene Silencing. Cell 123, 631-640.
Preall and Sontheimer (2005). RNAi: RISC Gets Loaded. Cell
543-545.
Ameres et al (2007). Molecular Basis for Target RNA Recognition and
Cleavage by Human RISC. Cell 130, 101-112.
Rana (2007). Illuminating the silence: understanding the structure
and function of small RNAs. Nature Reviews Mol Cell Biol. 8,
23-36.
Mechanisms of protein synthesis inhibition (miRNA)
Pillai et al (2005). Inhibition of translational initiation by
let-7 microRNAs in human cells. Science 309, 1573-1576
Wu et al (2006). MicroRNAs direct radip deadenylation of mRNA. PNAS
103, 4034-4039.
Wakiyama et al (2007) let-7 microRNA-mediated mRNA deadenilation
and translational repression in a mammalian cell-free system. Genes
Dev 21, 1857-1862
Chendrimada et al (2007) MicroRNA silencing through RISC
recruitment of eIF6. Nature 447, 823-829
Thermann and Hentze (2007). Drosophila miR2 induces
pseudo-polysomes and inhibits translation initiation. Nature 447,
875-878.
Pillai et al. (2007). Repression of protein synthesis by miRNAs:
how many mechanisms? TRENDS Cell. Biol. 17, 118-126.
P-bodies: mRNA purgatory
Sheth and Parker (2003). Decapping and Decay of Messenger RNAOccur
in Cytoplasmic Processing Bodies. Science 300, 805-808.
Liu et al. (2005). MicroRNA-dependent localization of targeted
mRNAs to mammalian P-bodies. Nature Cell Biol. 7, 719-723
Sen and Blau (2005). Argonaute 2/RISC resides in sites of mammalian
mRNA decay known as cytoplasmic bodies. Nature Cell Biol. 7,
633-636
Behm-Ansmant et al (2006). mRNA degradation by miRNAs and GW182
requires both CCR4:NOT deadenylase and DCP1:DCP2 decapping
complexes. Genes Dev. 20, 1885-1898
Eulalio et al. (2007). P bodies: at the crossroads of
post-transcriptional pathways. Nature Reviews Mol. Cell. Biol. 8,
9-22.
Parker and Sheth (2007). P Bodies and the Control of mRNA
Translation and Degradation. Molecular Cell 25, 635-646.
RNAi and heterochromatin silencing
Volpe et al (2002). Regulation of heterochromatic silencing and
histone H3 lysine-9 methylation by RNAi. Science 297,
1833-1837.
Zilberman et al (2003). ARGONAUTE4 Control of Locus-Specific siRNA
Accumulation and DNA and Histone Methylation. Science 299,
716-719.
Pal-Bhadra et al (2004). Heterochromatic Silencing and HP1
Localization in Drosophila Are Dependent on the RNAi
Machinery. Science 303, 669-672.
Verdel et al (2004). RNAi-Mediated Targeting of Heterochromatin by
the RITS Complex. Science 303, 672-676.
Chicas et al. (2005). Small interfering RNAs that trigger
posttranscriptional gene silencing are not required for the histone
H3 Lys9 methylation necessary for transgenic tandem repeat
stabilization in Neurospora crassa. Mol Cell Biol. 25,
3793-801.
Irvine et al (2006). Argonaute Silencing Is required for
Heterochromatic Silencing and Spreading. Science 313,
1134-1137.
Grimaud et al (2006). RNAi Components Are Required for Nuclear
Clustering of Polycomb Group Response Elements. Cell 124,
957-971.
Lei and Corces (2006). A Long-Distance Relationship between RNAi
and Polycomb. Cell 124, 886-888.
Bernstein and Allis (2005). RNA meets chromatin. Genes Dev. 19,
1635-1655.
Grewal and Elgin (2007). Transcription and RNA interference in the
formation of heterochromatin. Nature 447, 399-406.
PIWIs & piRNAs
O'Donnell and Boeke (2007). Mighty Piwis Defend the Germline
against Genome Intruders. Cell 129, 37-44.
Lin (2007). piRNAs in the Germ Line. Science 316, 397.
Mirtrons
Ruby et al. (2007). Intronic microRNA precursors that bypass Drosha
processing. Nature 448, 83-86.
Okamura et al. (2007). The mirtron pathway generates microRNA-class
regulatory RNAs in Drosophila. Cell 130, 89-100.
Silencing amplification
Cogoni and Macino (1999). Gene silencing in Neurspora crassa
requires a protein homologous to RNA-dependent RNA polymerase.
Nature 399, 166-169.
Lipardi et al. (2001). RNAi as random degradative PCR: siRNA
primers convert mRNA into dsRNAs that are degraded to generate new
siRNAs. Cell 107, 297-307.
Pak and Fire (2007). Distinct populations of primary and secondary
effectors during RNAi in C. elegans. Science 315,
241-244.
Sijen et al. (2007). Secondary siRNAs result from unprimed RNA
synthesis and form a distinct class. Science 315, 244-247.
Baulcombe (2007). Amplified Silencing. Science 315, 199-200.
Viral immunosuppressive miRNAs
Stern-Ginossar et al (2007). Host immune system gene targeting by a
viral miRNA. Science 317, 376
Small regulatory RNAs in bacteria
Mizuno et al. (1984). A unique mechanism regulating gene
expression: translational inhibition by a complementary RNA
transcript (micRNA). PNAS 81, 1966-1970.
Altuvia et al. (1997). A small, stable RNA induced by oxidative
stress: role as a pleiotropic regulator and antimutator. Cell 90,
43-53.
Zhang et al (1998). The OxyS regulatory RNA represses rpoS
translation
and binds the Hfq (HF-I) protein
EMBO J. 17, 6061-6068.
Zhang et al (2002). The Sm-like Hfq protein increases OxyS RNA
interaction with target mRNAs. Mol Cell 9, 11-22.
Massé and Gottesman (2002). A small RNA regulates the expression of
genes involved in iron metabolism in Escherichia coli. PNAS
99, 4620-4625.
Massé et al (2003). Coupled degradation of a small regulatory RNA
and its mRNA targets in Escherichia coli. Genes Dev. 17,
2374-2383.
Carpousis (2003) Degradation of targeted mRNAs in Escherichia
coli: regulation by a small antisense RNA. Genes Dev. 17,
2351-2355.
Lenz et al (2004). The small RNA chaperone Hfq and multiple small
RNAs control quorum sensing in Vibrio harveyi and Vibrio
cholerae. Cell 118, 69-82.
Afonyushkin et al (2005). Both RNase E and RNase III control the
stability of sodB mRNA upon translational inhibition by the
small regulatory RNA RyhB. Nucelic Acid Research 33,
1678-1689.
Morita et al (2005). RNAse E-based ribonucleoprotein complexes:
mechanical basis of mRNA destabilization mediated by bacterial
noncoding RNAs. Genes Dev. 19, 2176-2186.
Vecerek et al (2007). Control of Fur synthesis by the non-coding
RNA RhyB and iron-responsive decoding. EMBO J. 26, 965-975
Gottesman (2005). Micros for microbes: non-coding regulatory RNAs
in bacteria. Trends Genet. 21, 399-404.
Aiba (2007). Mechanism of RNA silencing by Hfq-binding small RNAs.
Curr. Opin. Micriobiol. 10, 134-139.
Provoking hypotheses and curiosities
aRNA
Li et al (2006). Small dsRNAs induce transcriptional activation in
human cells. PNAS 103, 17337-17342
Janowski et al (2007). Activating gene expression in mammalian
cells with promoter-targeted duplex RNAs. Nature Chem. Biol. 3,
166-173
Erika Check (2007). RNA interference: Hitting the on switch. News
Feature. Nature 448, 855-858
etc…
Berezikov et al. (2006). Diversity of microRNAs in human and
chimpanzee brain. Nature Genetics 38, 1375-1377.
The ENCODE Project Consortium (2007). Identification and analysis
of functional elements in 1% of the human genome by the ENCODE
pilot project. Nature 447, 799-816.
Greally (2007). Encyclopaedia of humble DNA. Nature 447, 782-783.
Teaching methods
Introductory lessons to principal themes
Analysis and in class discussion of seminal research papers
Summarizing powerpoint presentations and podcasts
Assessment methods
Admission Test (pass/fail).
Oral examination.
Teaching tools
Analysis and discussion of seminal papers and scientific
articles.
Powerpoint presentations of experimental approaches, results, and
models.
Podcast reviews of main themes.
Office hours
See the website of Alberto Danielli