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Transcriptome-wide profiling of multiple RNA modifications simultaneously at single-base resolution

The breadth and importance of RNA modifications are growing rapidly as modified ribonucleotides can impact the sequence, structure, function, stability, and fate of RNAs and their interactions with other molecules. Therefore, knowing cellular RNA modifications at single-base resolution could provide...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Khoddami, Vahid, Yerra, Archana, Mosbruger, Timothy L., Fleming, Aaron M., Burrows, Cynthia J., Cairns, Bradley R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Academy of Sciences 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6452723/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30872485
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1817334116
Descripción
Sumario:The breadth and importance of RNA modifications are growing rapidly as modified ribonucleotides can impact the sequence, structure, function, stability, and fate of RNAs and their interactions with other molecules. Therefore, knowing cellular RNA modifications at single-base resolution could provide important information regarding cell status and fate. A current major limitation is the lack of methods that allow the reproducible profiling of multiple modifications simultaneously, transcriptome-wide and at single-base resolution. Here we developed RBS-Seq, a modification of RNA bisulfite sequencing that enables the sensitive and simultaneous detection of m(5)C, Ψ, and m(1)A at single-base resolution transcriptome-wide. With RBS-Seq, m(5)C and m(1)A are accurately detected based on known signature base mismatches and are detected here simultaneously along with Ψ sites that show a 1–2 base deletion. Structural analyses revealed the mechanism underlying the deletion signature, which involves Ψ-monobisulfite adduction, heat-induced ribose ring opening, and Mg(2+)-assisted reorientation, causing base-skipping during cDNA synthesis. Detection of each of these modifications through a unique chemistry allows high-precision mapping of all three modifications within the same RNA molecule, enabling covariation studies. Application of RBS-Seq on HeLa RNA revealed almost all known m(5)C, m(1)A, and ψ sites in tRNAs and rRNAs and provided hundreds of new m(5)C and Ψ sites in noncoding RNAs and mRNAs. However, our results diverge greatly from earlier work, suggesting ∼10-fold fewer m(5)C sites in noncoding and coding RNAs and the absence of substantial m(1)A in mRNAs. Taken together, the approaches and refined datasets in this work will greatly enable future epitranscriptome studies.