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On the expanding roles of tRNA fragments in modulating cell behavior

Rogan Magee, Isidore Rigoutsos

2020Nucleic Acids Research193 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The fragments that derive from transfer RNAs (tRNAs) are an emerging category of regulatory RNAs. Known as tRFs, these fragments were reported for the first time only a decade ago, making them a relatively recent addition to the ever-expanding pantheon of non-coding RNAs. tRFs are short, 16-35 nucleotides (nts) in length, and produced through cleavage of mature and precursor tRNAs at various positions. Both cleavage positions and relative tRF abundance depend strongly on context, including the tissue type, tissue state, and disease, as well as the sex, population of origin, and race/ethnicity of an individual. These dependencies increase the urgency to understand the regulatory roles of tRFs. Such efforts are gaining momentum, and comprise experimental and computational approaches. System-level studies across many tissues and thousands of samples have produced strong evidence that tRFs have important and multi-faceted roles. Here, we review the relevant literature on tRF biology in higher organisms, single cell eukaryotes, and prokaryotes.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyTransfer RNAGeneticsEvolutionary biologyComputational biologyCell biologyRNAGeneRNA modifications and cancerRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsCancer-related molecular mechanisms research