Identification of microRNAs in the Cotton Root-Knot Nematode (Meloidogyne incognita)

Wednesday, January 6, 2016
Mardi Gras Ballroom Salons E, F, G & H (New Orleans Marriott)
Thursday, January 7, 2016
Mardi Gras Ballroom Salons E, F, G & H (New Orleans Marriott)
Chao Li , East Carolina University
Robert L. Nichols , Cotton Incorporated
Xiaoping Pan , East Carolina University
Baohong Zhang , East Carolina University
Fuliang Xie , East Carolina University
Yanqiong Zhang , East Carolina University
The root-knot nematode Meloidogyne incognita is among the most damaging plant-parasitic pests of several crops including cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) and tomato (Lycopersicon escultentum). Recently a genome has become available for M. incognita, which greatly facilitates investigation of the interactions between M. incognita and its plant hosts at the molecular level and enables formation of hypotheses concerning development at the cellular level. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are a class of small RNA molecules that serve as endogenous gene regulators.  They regulate many biological processes including reproduction, the sequencing of morphological development, and potentially of parasitism as well. Certain miRNAs regulate fundamental metabolism pathways and stress responses in M. incognita. Since a list of miRNAs has not been generated for M. incognita, we employed a bioinformatics tool called mirDeepFinder to identify miRNAs from the small RNA database of M. incognita (GSM611102) that was generated from deep sequencing. A total of 254 conserved miRNAs belonging to 161 miRNA families were identified, as were 35 novel miRNAs belonging to 31 families.  The 16 most commonly-found miRNAs in order of abundance were min-miR-100a, min-miR-124, min-miR-71a, min-miR-1, min-miR-228, min-miR-92, min-miR-72, min-miR-49b, min-miR-58, min-miR-252, min-miR-lin-4, and min-miR-87, min-miR-2a, min-miR-34a, min-miR-50a, min-miR-279a. The length of the pre-miRNAs varied greatly from 50-197 nt, with an average of 88 ± 39 nt. The average minimal folding free energy (MFE) and MFE index (MFEI) of the identified miRNAs were 30.3 Kcal/mole and 0.92 respectively, indicating that these miRNAs can readily fold into a typical hairpin secondary structure.