Discovering microRNAs and their targets in the red flour beetle Tribolium castaneum from expressed sequence tags

Publication date: September 2018 Source:Meta Gene, Volume 17 Author(s): Chandan Badapanda, Ankita Rathore MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are endogenous, single stranded, small RNAs that are 18–24 nucleotides in length, ubiquitously found in eukaryotes and in some viruses. miRNAs majorly help in down regulation of genes by binding to the complimentary sites on 3′ untranslated regions of target messenger RNA (mRNAs), and more than 30% of the genes in animals are believed to be under the control of miRNAs. The red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum is a global pest of stored agricultural products. The use of insecticides to control beetles is challenging due to emergence of resistance against pesticide and RNA interference (RNAi) has recently been suggested as a novel and effective approach for pest control to identify potential targets in pest species. Thus, in the present study, we have developed a computational pipeline to identify miRNAs and their targets from expressed sequence tags (ESTs) of T. castaneum. First, 68,506 ESTs from T. castaneum were clustered using CD-HIT-EST to generate 35,367 ESTs that were used to search against 3991 unique insects miRNAs dataset from miRBase release 21. As a result, 122 unique sequences were obtained which were mapped against Rfam to remove tRNA, rRNA followed by BlastX against NR database to remove the protein coding genes. A total of 89 sequences were obtained which were further validated for secondary structure predictions through Mfold and...
Source: Meta Gene - Category: Genetics & Stem Cells Source Type: research