Cell Reports (Feb 2024)
Pre-piRNA trimming safeguards piRNAs against erroneous targeting by RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
Abstract
Summary: The Piwi/Piwi-interacting RNA (piRNA) pathway protects genome integrity in animal germ lines. Maturation of piRNAs involves nucleolytic processing at both 5′ and 3′ ends. The ribonuclease PARN-1 and its orthologs mediate piRNA 3′ trimming in worms, insects, and mammals. However, the significance of this evolutionarily conserved processing step is not fully understood. Employing C. elegans as a model, we recently discovered that 3′ trimming protects piRNAs against non-templated nucleotide additions and degradation. Here, we find that worms lacking PARN-1 accumulate an uncharacterized RNA species termed anti-piRNAs, which are antisense to piRNAs. Anti-piRNAs associate with Piwi proteins, are 17–19 nucleotides long, and begin with 5′ guanine or adenine. Untrimmed pre-piRNAs are misdirected by the terminal nucleotidyltransferase RDE-3 and RNA-dependent RNA polymerase EGO-1, leading to the formation of anti-piRNAs. This work identifies a class of small RNAs in parn-1 mutants and provides insight into the activities of RDE-3, EGO-1, and Piwi proteins.