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Biology and Biotechnology of Environmental Stress Tolerance in Plants, Volume 3
9.3.1 MICRORNA (miRNA)
microRNAs (miRNAs) are single-stranded RNA molecules that are short
in length and non-coding. They can bind with the non-coding region in
the poly-A tail of mRNA to inhibit the activity or promote the degradation
of mRNA (Bartel, 2004). These are abundantly present in the genomes of
plants, animals, and viruses, and the vast majority of them have distinct
genetic loci and exhibit conservation among species belonging to the
same biological kingdom (Lagos-Quintana et al., 2001). The length of
miRNAs for animals ranges from 20–22 nucleotides, whereas it is 20–24
nucleotides for plants (Bartel, 2004; Reinhart et al., 2002). miRNAs are
reported to regulate gene expression in plants that are involved in a variety
of activities, including the development of root, stem, leaf, and flower,
shifting of vegetative phase to reproductive phase and stress responses
(Zhang et al., 2006). During the biogenesis of miRNAs, the template
genes are catalyzed by RNA polymerase II and resulted in a primary
transcript that adopts a feedback structure (Yaish et al., 2015). With the
assistance of some nuclear proteins, such fold back structure is ultimately
converted into a specialized RNA duplex structure often called miR-3P/
miR-5P duplex (Kurihara et al., 2006). The complex is then divided to
produce mature miRNA. After the formation, mature miRNAs bind with
the functional endonuclease protein, i.e., Argonaute (AGO) to form the
RISC, which in turn accomplish gene regulation through the splitting
of mRNA or cleavage of mRNA or inhibition of translational activities
(Naqvi et al., 2012). Both pleiotropically and prevalently, a single miRNA
is mostly able to recognize more or less hundreds of distinct mRNA
transcripts (Li et al., 2018). To recognize target mRNA such miRNA, use
sequence complementarity which is the prerequisite to regulating the level
of target protein (Bartel, 2004; Llave et al., 2002; Shukla et al., 2011). The
microRNA can recognize multiple mRNAs and can bind with them and
in this way mRNA and microRNA jointly consist of a precise regulation
system (Zhang & Xie, 2017). Along with normal developmental events
and stress response miRNAs are found to be a key player in cell differen
tiation, proliferation, tumorigenesis, apoptosis, etc., in plants as well as
other eukaryotes (Cai et al., 2009). Few miRNAs have been revealed that
are highly conserved across distantly related taxa, ranging from mosses to
higher flowering eudicots in the plant kingdom and worms to mammals
in the animal kingdom (Axtell et al., 2007; Zhang et al., 2006; Bartel,
2004). The binding of miRNA and their target mRNA maybe with perfect