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==Turnover== Turnover of mature miRNA is needed for rapid changes in miRNA expression profiles. During miRNA maturation in the cytoplasm, uptake by the Argonaute protein is thought to stabilize the guide strand, while the opposite (* or "passenger") strand is preferentially destroyed. In what has been called a "Use it or lose it" strategy, Argonaute may preferentially retain miRNAs with many targets over miRNAs with few or no targets, leading to degradation of the non-targeting molecules.<ref name="Assassins">{{cite journal | vauthors = Kai ZS, Pasquinelli AE | title = MicroRNA assassins: factors that regulate the disappearance of miRNAs | journal = Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | volume = 17 | issue = 1 | pages = 5–10 | date = January 2010 | pmid = 20051982 | doi = 10.1038/nsmb.1762 | pmc = 6417416 }}</ref> Decay of mature miRNAs in ''[[Caenorhabditis elegans]]'' is mediated by the 5'-to-3' [[exoribonuclease]] [[XRN2]], also known as Rat1p.<ref name="Chatterjee">{{cite journal | vauthors = Chatterjee S, Grosshans H | title = Active turnover modulates mature microRNA activity in Caenorhabditis elegans | journal = Nature | volume = 461 | issue = 7263 | pages = 546–49 | date = September 2009 | pmid = 19734881 | doi = 10.1038/nature08349 | bibcode = 2009Natur.461..546C | s2cid = 4414841 }}</ref> In plants, SDN (small RNA degrading nuclease) family members degrade miRNAs in the opposite (3'-to-5') direction. Similar enzymes are encoded in animal genomes, but their roles have not been described.<ref name=Assassins/> Several miRNA modifications affect miRNA stability. As indicated by work in the model organism ''Arabidopsis thaliana'' (thale cress), mature plant miRNAs appear to be stabilized by the addition of methyl moieties at the 3' end. The 2'-O-conjugated methyl groups block the addition of [[uracil]] (U) residues by [[UTP—glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase|uridyltransferase]] enzymes, a modification that may be associated with miRNA degradation. However, uridylation may also protect some miRNAs; the consequences of this modification are incompletely understood. Uridylation of some animal miRNAs has been reported. Both plant and animal miRNAs may be altered by addition of adenine (A) residues to the 3' end of the miRNA. An extra A added to the end of mammalian [[miR-122]], a liver-enriched miRNA important in [[hepatitis C]], stabilizes the molecule and plant miRNAs ending with an adenine residue have slower decay rates.<ref name=Assassins/>
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