4.4 Article

The presence of high-molecular-weight viral RNAs interferes with the detection of viral small RNAs

Journal

RNA
Volume 16, Issue 5, Pages 1062-1067

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1261/rna.2049510

Keywords

virus; satellite RNA; siRNA; small RNA; RNA silencing

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Viral small interfering RNA ( siRNA) accumulation in plants is reported to exhibit a strong strand polarity bias, with plus (+) strand siRNAs dominating over minus (-) strand populations. This is of particular interest, as siRNAs processed from double-stranded RNA would be expected to accumulate equivalent amounts of both species. Here, we show that, as reported, (-) strand viral siRNAs are detected at much lower levels than (+) strand-derived species using standard Northern hybridization approaches. However, when total RNA is spiked with in vitro-transcribed antisense viral genomic RNA, (-) strand viral siRNAs are detected at increased levels equivalent to those of (+) strand siRNA. Our results suggest that (+) and (-) strand viral siRNAs accumulate to equivalent levels; however, a proportion of the (-) strand siRNAs are sequestered from the total detectable small RNA population during gel electrophoresis by hybridizing to the high-molecular-weight sense strand viral genomic RNA. Our findings provide a plausible explanation for the observed strand bias of viral siRNA accumulation, and could have wider implications in the analysis of both viral and nonviral small RNA accumulation.

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