聚腺苷酸
核糖核蛋白
遗传学
核糖核酸
转录后修饰
聚合酶
生物
RNA结合蛋白
细胞生物学
信使核糖核酸
计算生物学
DNA
基因
作者
Ahmadreza Mofayezi,Mahdieh Jadaliha,Fatemeh‐zahra Zangeneh,Vahid Khoddami
摘要
Abstract Most eukaryotic mRNAs and different non‐coding RNAs undergo a form of 3′ end processing known as polyadenylation. Polyadenylation machinery is present in almost all organisms except few species. In bacteria, the machinery has evolved from PNPase, which adds heteropolymeric tails, to a poly(A)‐specific polymerase. Differently, a complex machinery for accurate polyadenylation and several non‐canonical poly(A) polymerases are developed in eukaryotes. The role of poly(A) tail has also evolved from serving as a degradative signal to a stabilizing modification that also regulates translation. In this review, we discuss poly(A) tail emergence in prokaryotes and its development into a stable, yet dynamic feature at the 3′ end of mRNAs in eukaryotes. We also describe how appearance of novel poly(A) polymerases gives cells flexibility to shape poly(A) tail. We explain how poly(A) tail dynamics help regulate cognate RNA metabolism in a context‐dependent manner, such as during oocyte maturation. Finally, we describe specific mRNAs in metazoans that bear stem‐loops instead of poly(A) tails. We conclude with how recent discoveries about poly(A) tail can be applied to mRNA technology. This article is categorized under: RNA Evolution and Genomics > RNA and Ribonucleoprotein Evolution RNA Processing > 3′ End Processing RNA Turnover and Surveillance > Regulation of RNA Stability
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