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Dual roles for piRNAs in promoting and preventing gene silencing in C. elegans

Brooke E. E. Montgomery, Tarah Vijayasarathy, Taylor N. Marks, Charlotte Cialek, Kailee J. Reed, Taiowa A. Montgomery

2021Cell Reports28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) regulate many biological processes through mechanisms that are not fully understood. In Caenorhabditis elegans, piRNAs intersect the endogenous RNA interference (RNAi) pathway, involving a distinct class of small RNAs called 22G-RNAs, to regulate gene expression in the germline. In the absence of piRNAs, 22G-RNA production from many genes is reduced, pointing to a role for piRNAs in facilitating endogenous RNAi. Here, however, we show that many genes gain, rather than lose, 22G-RNAs in the absence of piRNAs, which is in some instances coincident with RNA silencing. Aberrant 22G-RNA production is somewhat stochastic but once established can occur within a population for at least 50 generations. Thus, piRNAs both promote and suppress 22G-RNA production and gene silencing. rRNAs and histones are hypersusceptible to aberrant silencing, but we do not find evidence that their misexpression is the primary cause of the transgenerational sterility observed in piRNA-defective mutants.

Topics & Concepts

Piwi-interacting RNARNA interferenceBiologyRasiRNAGene silencingCaenorhabditis elegansGeneticsGeneArgonauteRNAmicroRNACell biologyPopulationSmall RNADNA-directed RNA interferenceRNA silencingSociologyDemographyCRISPR and Genetic EngineeringChromosomal and Genetic VariationsGenetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model Organisms
Dual roles for piRNAs in promoting and preventing gene silencing in C. elegans | Litcius