In Caenorhabditis elegans, lin-4 and let-7 encode 22- and 21-nucleotide
RNAs, respectively, that function as key regulators of developmental
timing. Because the appearance of these short RNAs is regulated during
development, they are also referred to as "small temporal RNAs" (stRNAs).
We show that many more 21- and 22-nt expressed RNAs, termed microRNAs,
(miRNAs), exist in invertebrates and vertebrates, and that some of these
novel RNAs, similar to let-7 stRNA, are also highly conserved. This
suggests that sequence-specific post-transcriptional regulatory
mechanisms mediated by small RNAs are more general than previously
appreciated.