Elsi Ferro, Candela L Szischik, Alejandra C Ventura, Carla Bosia
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Cells may exploit oscillatory gene expression to encode biological information. Temporal features of oscillations, such as pulse frequency and amplitude, are determinant for the outcome of signalling pathways. However, little effort has been devoted to unveiling the role of pulsatility in the context of post-transcriptional gene regulation, where microRNAs act by binding to RNAs and regulate their expression. Here, we study the effects of periodic against constant microRNA synthesis within minimal microRNA-target networks. We find that there is a repressive advantage of pulsatile over constant microRNA synthesis, and that the extent of repression depends on the frequency of pulses, thus uncovering frequency preference behaviours. We show that the preference for specific input frequencies is determined by relative microRNA and target kinetic rates and can lead to exclusive frequency-dependent repression on distinct RNA species, thereby highlighting a potential mechanism of selective dynamical target regulation. Moreover, we show that frequencies observed in periodically expressed microRNAs, such as those involved in circadian rhythms and development, can be selectively favored. Our findings might have implications for experimental studies aimed at understanding how periodic patterns drive biological responses through microRNA-mediated signalling and provide suggestions for validation in synthetic networks.
期刊介绍:
Nucleic Acids Research (NAR) is a scientific journal that publishes research on various aspects of nucleic acids and proteins involved in nucleic acid metabolism and interactions. It covers areas such as chemistry and synthetic biology, computational biology, gene regulation, chromatin and epigenetics, genome integrity, repair and replication, genomics, molecular biology, nucleic acid enzymes, RNA, and structural biology. The journal also includes a Survey and Summary section for brief reviews. Additionally, each year, the first issue is dedicated to biological databases, and an issue in July focuses on web-based software resources for the biological community. Nucleic Acids Research is indexed by several services including Abstracts on Hygiene and Communicable Diseases, Animal Breeding Abstracts, Agricultural Engineering Abstracts, Agbiotech News and Information, BIOSIS Previews, CAB Abstracts, and EMBASE.