Litcius/Paper detail

The plant siRNA landscape

Hervé Vaucheret, Olivier Voinnet

2023The Plant Cell81 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Whereas micro (mi)RNAs are considered the clean, noble side of the small RNA world, small interfering (si)RNAs are often seen as a noisy set of molecules whose barbarian acronyms reflect a large diversity of often elusive origins and functions. Twenty-five years after their discovery in plants, however, new classes of siRNAs are still being identified, sometimes in discrete tissues or at particular developmental stages, making the plant siRNA world substantially more complex and subtle than originally anticipated. Focusing primarily on the model Arabidopsis, we review here the plant siRNA landscape, including transposable elements (TE)-derived siRNAs, a vast array of non-TE-derived endogenous siRNAs, as well as exogenous siRNAs produced in response to invading nucleic acids such as viruses or transgenes. We primarily emphasize the extraordinary sophistication and diversity of their biogenesis and, secondarily, the variety of their known or presumed functions, including via non-cell autonomous activities, in the sporophyte, gametophyte, and shortly after fertilization.

Topics & Concepts

BiologySmall interfering RNATrans-acting siRNAArabidopsisRNA interferenceBiogenesisTransposable elementRNA silencingComputational biologyRNAGeneticsCell biologyGenomeGeneMutantPlant Molecular Biology ResearchChromosomal and Genetic VariationsPlant Virus Research Studies