Criteria for Annotation of Plant MicroRNAs

Blake C. Meyers(University of Delaware), Michael J. Axtell(Pennsylvania State University), Bonnie Bartel(Rice University), David P. Bartel(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), David C. Baulcombe(University of Cambridge), John L. Bowman(Monash University), Xiaofeng Cao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), James C. Carrington(Oregon State University), Xuemei Chen(University of California, Riverside), Pamela J. Green(University of Delaware), Sam Griffiths‐Jones(University of Manchester), Steven E. Jacobsen(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Allison C. Mallory(Institut Jean-Pierre Bourgin), Robert A. Martienssen(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), R. Scott Poethig(University of Pennsylvania), Yijun Qi(National Institute of Biological Sciences, Beijing), Hervé Vaucheret(Institut Jean-Pierre Bourgin), Olivier Voinnet(Institut de Biologie Moléculaire des Plantes), Yuichiro Watanabe(The University of Tokyo), Detlef Weigel(Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology), Jian‐Kang Zhu(University of California, Riverside)
The Plant Cell
December 1, 2008
Cited by 1,222Open Access
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Abstract

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are approximately 21 nucleotide noncoding RNAs produced by Dicer-catalyzed excision from stem-loop precursors. Many plant miRNAs play critical roles in development, nutrient homeostasis, abiotic stress responses, and pathogen responses via interactions with specific target mRNAs. miRNAs are not the only Dicer-derived small RNAs produced by plants: A substantial amount of the total small RNA abundance and an overwhelming amount of small RNA sequence diversity is contributed by distinct classes of 21- to 24-nucleotide short interfering RNAs. This fact, coupled with the rapidly increasing rate of plant small RNA discovery, demands an increased rigor in miRNA annotations. Herein, we update the specific criteria required for the annotation of plant miRNAs, including experimental and computational data, as well as refinements to standard nomenclature.


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