Entrar

Intact DNA strands can be found in fossils, while scientists sometimes struggle to keep RNA intact under laboratory conditions. The structural variations between RNA and DNA underlie the differences in their stability and longevity. Because DNA is double-stranded, it is inherently more stable. The single-stranded structure of RNA is less stable but also more flexible and can form weak internal bonds. Additionally, most RNAs in the cell are relatively short, while DNA can be up to 250 million nucleotides long. RNA has a hydroxyl group on the second carbon of the ribose sugar, increasing the likelihood of breakage of the sugar-phosphate backbone.

The cell can exploit the instability of RNA, regulating both its longevity and availability. More stable mRNAs will be available for translation for a longer period of time than less stable mRNAs transcripts. RNA binding proteins (RBPs) in cells play a key role in the regulation of RNA stability. RBPs can bind to a specific sequence (AUUUA) in the 3’ untranslated region (UTR) of mRNAs. Interestingly, the number of AUUUA repeats appears to recruit RBPs in a specific way: fewer repeats recruit stabilizing RBPs. Several, overlapping repeats result in the binding of destabilizing RBPs. All cells have enzymes called RNases that break down RNAs. Typically, the 5’cap and polyA tail protect eukaryotic mRNA from degradation until the cell no longer needs the transcript.

The emerging research on epitranscriptomics aims to define regulatory mRNA modifications. Recently, scientists have discovered an important role for methylation in mRNA stability. The methylation of adenosine residues (m6A) appears to increase mRNA translation and degradation. m6A also has roles in stress responses, nuclear export, and mRNA maturation. The presence of a modified uracil residue, pseudouridine, also appears to play an important role in RNA regulation.

Tags

Do Capítulo 8:

article

Now Playing

8.3 : RNA Stability

Transcription: DNA to RNA

32.8K Visualizações

article

8.1 : What is Gene Expression?

Transcription: DNA to RNA

25.4K Visualizações

article

8.2 : RNA Structure

Transcription: DNA to RNA

23.1K Visualizações

article

8.4 : Bacterial RNA Polymerase

Transcription: DNA to RNA

25.9K Visualizações

article

8.5 : Types of RNA

Transcription: DNA to RNA

23.1K Visualizações

article

8.6 : Transcription

Transcription: DNA to RNA

33.9K Visualizações

article

8.7 : Transcription Factors

Transcription: DNA to RNA

19.5K Visualizações

article

8.8 : Eukaryotic RNA Polymerases

Transcription: DNA to RNA

21.2K Visualizações

article

8.9 : RNA Polymerase II Accessory Proteins

Transcription: DNA to RNA

8.9K Visualizações

article

8.10 : Transcription Elongation Factors

Transcription: DNA to RNA

10.5K Visualizações

article

8.11 : Pre-mRNA Processing

Transcription: DNA to RNA

24.2K Visualizações

article

8.12 : RNA Splicing

Transcription: DNA to RNA

16.7K Visualizações

article

8.13 : Chromatin Structure Regulates pre-mRNA Processing

Transcription: DNA to RNA

6.8K Visualizações

article

8.14 : Nuclear Export of mRNA

Transcription: DNA to RNA

7.4K Visualizações

article

8.15 : Ribosomal RNA Synthesis

Transcription: DNA to RNA

12.9K Visualizações

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacidade

Termos de uso

Políticas

Pesquisa

Educação

SOBRE A JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Todos os direitos reservados