Dear Brooke Rhead,
Dear UCSC Genome Bioinformatics Group,

Many thanks for your prompt advise, but in this way I am also able to
see only one hit (that is miR-675, on chr 11) that you mentioned. I read
in a recent Cell paper that about 8% of miRs are hosted by LncRNA genes.
Is there any way to use less stringent filters?

Can you also please advise me on if it is possible to list out LncRNAs
that are specifically expressed in a particular tissue like heart?

Best regards

Kumar

-----Original Message-----
From: Brooke Rhead [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Saturday, December 03, 2011 2:35 AM
To: Regalla, Kumarswamy
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Genome] LncRNAs hosting miRNAs

Hi Kumarswamy,

You could go about looking for microRNAs within lncRNAs by identifying
tracks that contain the RNAs and then using the Table Browser to
intersect them.

To find relevant tracks, use the "track search" button (just beneath the
main graphic in the Genome Browser), or browse the tracks in the "Genes
and Gene Prediction Tracks" section.  (There is a track called
"sno/miRNA" and another called "lincRNAs...," but there may be others.)

If you have not used the Table Browser before, there is a good
introduction to it here:
http://www.openhelix.com/cgi/tutorialInfo.cgi?id=28
also see the user's guide:
http://genome.ucsc.edu/goldenPath/help/hgTablesHelp.html

I tried doing an intersection by selecting the "linkRNA Transcripts" 
track in the Table Browser and using the "intersection: create" button
to create a base-pair-wise intersection with the sno/miRNA track.  This
found one region of intersection, at chr11:2,017,989-2,018,061 (using
the GRCh37/hg19 assembly).

I hope this helps you get started.  If you have further questions,
please contact us again at [email protected].

--
Brooke Rhead
UCSC Genome Bioinformatics Group




On 12/2/11 8:04 AM, [email protected] wrote:
> Dear USCC Genome people,
>
> I am a post-doc at Hannover Medical School. Many protein coding genes 
> host microRNAs, mostly in their intronic regions. Can you please 
> advise me if there is a way to know what are the microRNAs that are 
> hosted by LncRNA genes?
>
> Best regards Kumarswamy
> _______________________________________________ Genome maillist  - 
> [email protected] https://lists.soe.ucsc.edu/mailman/listinfo/genome

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