Common grounds

Research in sea anemones suggests that the micro ribonucleic acids machinery may have evolved earlier than previously thought, before the ancestors of plants and animals separated from each other.

An adult polyp of the starlet sea anemone Nematostella vectensis. Image credit: Yehu Moran, 2014 (CC BY 4.0)

In both animals and plants, small molecules known as micro ribonucleic acids (or miRNAs for short) control the amount of proteins cells make from instructions encoded in their DNA. Cells make mature miRNA molecules by cutting and modifying newly-made RNA molecules in two stages.

Some of the components animals and plants utilize to make and use miRNAs are similar, but most are completely different. For example, in plants an enzyme known as Dicer cuts newly made RNAs into mature miRNAs with the help of a protein called HYL1, whereas humans and other animals do not have HYL1 and Dicer works with alternative partner proteins, instead. Therefore, it is generally believed that miRNAs evolved separately in animals and plants after they split from a common ancestor around 1.6 billion years ago.

Recent studies on sea anemones and other primitive animals challenge this idea. Proteins similar to HYL1 in plants have been discovered in sea anemones and sponges, and sea anemone miRNAs show several similarities to plant miRNAs including their mode of action. However, it is not clear whether these HYL1-like proteins work in the same way as their plant counterparts.

Here, Tripathi, Admoni et al. investigated the role of the HYL1-like protein in sea anemones. The experiments found that this protein was essential for the sea anemones to make miRNAs and to grow and develop properly. Unlike HYL1 in plants – which is involved in both stages of processing newly-made miRNAs into mature miRNAs – the sea anemone HYL1-like protein only helped in the second stage to make mature miRNAs from intermediate molecules known as precursor miRNAs.

These findings demonstrate that some of the components plants use to make miRNAs also perform similar roles in sea anemones. This suggests that the miRNA system evolved before the ancestors of plants and animals separated from each other. Questions for future studies will include investigating how plants and animals evolved different miRNA machinery, and why sponges and jellyfish have HYL1-like proteins, whereas humans and other more complex animals do not.