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      A MicroRNA as a Translational Repressor of APETALA2 in Arabidopsis Flower Development

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      Science (New York, N.Y.)

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          Abstract

          Plant microRNAs (miRNAs) show a high degree of sequence complementarity to, and are believed to guide the cleavage of, their target messenger RNAs. Here, I show that miRNA172, which can base-pair with the messenger RNA of a floral homeotic gene, APETALA2, regulates APETALA2 expression primarily through translational inhibition. Elevated miRNA172 accumulation results in floral organ identity defects similar to those in loss-of-function apetala2 mutants. Elevated levels of mutant APETALA2 RNA with disrupted miRNA172 base pairing, but not wild-type APETALA2 RNA, result in elevated levels of APETALA2 protein and severe floral patterning defects. Therefore, miRNA172 likely acts in cell-fate specification as a translational repressor of APETALA2 in Arabidopsis flower development.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          0404511
          7473
          Science
          Science
          Science (New York, N.Y.)
          0036-8075
          1095-9203
          24 November 2016
          31 July 2003
          26 March 2004
          29 November 2016
          : 303
          : 5666
          : 2022-2025
          Affiliations
          Waksman Institute, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA
          Article
          PMC5127708 PMC5127708 5127708 nihpa832113
          10.1126/science.1088060
          5127708
          12893888
          97dcc49f-cd03-41a3-81a7-631a93d3703a
          History
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