| Literature DB >> 19480689 |
Bao Zhen Tan1, Hua Huang, Runyi Lam, Tuck Wah Soong.
Abstract
The post-transcriptional modification of mammalian transcripts in the central nervous system by adenosine-to-inosine RNA editing is an important mechanism for the generation of molecular diversity, and serves to regulate protein function through recoding of genomic information. As the molecular players and an increasing number of edited targets are identified and characterized, adenosine-to-inosine modification serves as an exquisite mechanism for customizing channel function within diverse biological niches. Here, we review the mechanisms that could regulate adenosine-to-inosine RNA editing and the impact of dysregulation in clinical conditions.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19480689 PMCID: PMC2694175 DOI: 10.1186/1756-6606-2-13
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Brain ISSN: 1756-6606 Impact factor: 4.041
Figure 1Model of the conformational changes during ADAR2-mediated RNA editing. The deaminase domain is represented by the blue box; double-strand RNA binding motif (dsRBM), by the yellow boxes. In the absence of RNA, ADAR2 protein is inactive because the N-terminal domain prevents the association of dsRBMII and catalytic domain with substrate. In the presence of RNA substrate with specific secondary elements and sufficient length, conformational change frees up the catalytic domain, and allows both dsRBM and catalytic domain to bind to RNA substrate, as well as activation of enzyme. After the edited site is converted from A (in red) to a G (in red) by ADAR2, the RNA substrate is released for translation. (Figure adapted from Macbeth et al [26].)
Figure 2ADAR2 genomic structures for both human and mice. Exons are represented by boxes; intron, by lines. Filled boxes are coding and open boxes are non-coding. # and * indicate the positions of potential initiator methionines and stop codons respectively. The grey box before exon 2 indicates the 47 nucleotide cassette, and A/G denotes the site of editing that creates the AG splice site. Alternatively spliced exons are indicated. The yellow box indicates the position of dsRBM, double stranded RNA binding domain while the green box indicates the position of catalytic domain. (Figure adapted from Slavov and Gardiner [32].)