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Long non-coding RNAs are largely dispensable for zebrafish embryogenesis, viability and fertility

Authors: 
Mehdi Goudarzi, Kathryn Berg, Lindsey M Pieper, Alexander F Schier
Citation: 
bioRXive. 2018;[Epub] doi:10.1101/374702
Abstract: 
Hundreds of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) have been identified as potential regulators of gene expression, but their functions remain largely unknown. To study the role of lncRNAs during vertebrate development, we selected 25 zebrafish lncRNAs based on their conservation, expression profile or proximity to developmental regulators, and used CRISPR-Cas9 to generate 32 deletion alleles. We observed altered transcription of neighboring genes in some mutants, but none of the lncRNAs were required for embryogenesis, viability or fertility. Even RNAs with previously proposed non-coding functions (cyrano and squint) and other conserved lncRNAs (gas5 and lnc-setd1ba) were dispensable. In one case (lnc-phox2bb), absence of putative DNA regulatory-elements, but not of the lncRNA transcript itself, resulted in abnormal development. LncRNAs might have redundant, subtle, or context-dependent roles, but extrapolation from our results suggests that the majority of individual zebrafish lncRNAs are dispensable for embryogenesis, viability and fertility.
Epub: 
Yes
Organism or Cell Type: 
zebrafish
Delivery Method: 
microinjection