Plant Long Noncoding RNAs: New Players in the Field of Post-Transcriptional Regulations

Noncoding RNA. 2021 Feb 17;7(1):12. doi: 10.3390/ncrna7010012.

Abstract

The first reference to the "C-value paradox" reported an apparent imbalance between organismal genome size and morphological complexity. Since then, next-generation sequencing has revolutionized genomic research and revealed that eukaryotic transcriptomes contain a large fraction of non-protein-coding components. Eukaryotic genomes are pervasively transcribed and noncoding regions give rise to a plethora of noncoding RNAs with undeniable biological functions. Among them, long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) seem to represent a new layer of gene expression regulation, participating in a wide range of molecular mechanisms at the transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels. In addition to their role in epigenetic regulation, plant lncRNAs have been associated with the degradation of complementary RNAs, the regulation of alternative splicing, protein sub-cellular localization, the promotion of translation and protein post-translational modifications. In this review, we report and integrate numerous and complex mechanisms through which long noncoding transcripts regulate post-transcriptional gene expression in plants.

Keywords: alternative splicing; long noncoding RNA; post-transcriptional regulation; post-translational modification; protein re-localization; target mimicry; translation promotion.

Publication types

  • Review