0000000001101795

AUTHOR

Hélène Scheer

0000-0001-8052-1129

RNA uridylation and decay in plants

RNA uridylation consists of the untemplated addition of uridines at the 3′ extremity of an RNA molecule. RNA uridylation is catalysed by terminal uridylyltransferases (TUTases), which form a subgroup of the terminal nucleotidyltransferase family, to which poly(A) polymerases also belong. The key role of RNA uridylation is to regulate RNA degradation in a variety of eukaryotes, including fission yeast, plants and animals. In plants, RNA uridylation has been mostly studied in two model species, the green algae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and the flowering plant Arabidopsis thaliana . Plant TUTases target a variety of RNA substrates, differing in size and function. These RNA substrates include …

research product

Supplementary_Dataset4_Representative Poales HESO1 alignment. from RNA uridylation and decay in plants

Representative Poales HESO1 alignment. Related to Figure 5.

research product

Supplementary_Dataset5_Representative Poales URT1 alignment. from RNA uridylation and decay in plants

Representative Poales URT1 alignment. Related to Figure 5.

research product

Supplementary_Dataset1_HESO1sequences. from RNA uridylation and decay in plants

HESO1 sequences in FASTA format. Related to Figures 3 and 4.

research product

Supplementary_Dataset3_HESO1 and URT1 alignment. from RNA uridylation and decay in plants

Alignment of HESO1 and URT1 sequences. Related to Figures 3 and 4.

research product

Supplementary_Dataset2_URT1sequences. from RNA uridylation and decay in plants

URT1 sequences in FASTA format. Related to Figures 3 and 4.

research product