| Literature DB >> 30197877 |
Justin T Roberts1, Dillon G Patterson1, Valeria M King1, Shivam V Amin1, Caroline J Polska1, Dominika Houserova2, Aline Crucello1, Emmaline C Barnhill1, Molly M Miller1, Timothy D Sherman1, Glen M Borchert1,2.
Abstract
RNA editing by RNA specific adenosine deaminase acting on RNA (ADAR) is increasingly being found to alter microRNA (miRNA) regulation. Editing of miRNA transcripts can affect their processing, as well as which messenger RNAs (mRNAs) they target. Further, editing of target mRNAs can also affect their complementarity to miRNAs. Notably, ADAR editing is often increased in malignancy with the effect of these RNA changes being largely unclear. In addition, numerous reports have now identified an array of miRNAs that directly contribute to various malignancies although the majority of their targets remain largely undefined. Here we propose that modulating the targets of miRNAs via mRNA editing is a frequent occurrence in cancer and an underappreciated participant in pathology. In order to more accurately characterize the relationship between these two regulatory processes, this study examined RNA editing events within mRNA sequences of two breast cancer cell lines (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231) and determined whether or not these edits could modulate miRNA associations. Computational analyses of RNA-Seq data from these two cell lines identified over 50,000 recurrent editing sites within human mRNAs, and many of these were located in 3' untranslated regions (UTRs). When these locations were screened against the list of currently-annotated miRNAs we discovered that editing caused a subset (~9%) to have significant alterations to mRNA complementarity. One miRNA in particular, miR-140-3p, is known to be misexpressed in many breast cancers, and we found that mRNA editing allowed this miRNA to directly target the apoptosis inducing gene DFFA in MCF-7, but not in MDA-MB-231 cells. As these two cell lines are known to have distinct characteristics in terms of morphology, invasiveness and physiological responses, we hypothesized that the differential RNA editing of DFFA in these two cell lines could contribute to their phenotypic differences. Indeed, we confirmed through western blotting that inhibiting miR-140-3p increases expression of the DFFA protein product in MCF-7, but not MDA-MB-231, and further that inhibition of miR-140-3p also increases cellular growth in MCF-7, but not MDA-MB-231. Broadly, these results suggest that the creation of miRNA targets may be an underappreciated function of ADAR and may help further elucidate the role of RNA editing in tumor pathogenicity.Entities:
Keywords: ADAR; RNA editing; breast; cancer; inosine; microRNA; microRNA targeting
Year: 2018 PMID: 30197877 PMCID: PMC6128407 DOI: 10.3390/pr6050042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Processes (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9717 Impact factor: 2.847
Figure 1.ADARs deaminate adenosine to inosine, potentially altering miRNA complementarities. A cartoon depicting adenosine (left), deaminated adenosine (inosine, in center), and guanine (right).
Figure 2.Effect of RNA editing on DFFA. A representative deamination site (green) occurring in the 3’ UTR of DNA fragmentation factor α (DFFA) is shown in both the unedited (left) and edited (right) state. The seed of miR-140–3p (blue) was screened using a sliding windows approach (depicted with a yellow box) against all possible seed matches within the DFFA sequence. Complimentary base pairing is indicated by the black lines.
Figure 3.Alignment of RNA-Seq reads to the human genome. Poly(A) selected RNA from two breast cancer cell lines (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231) were sequenced with an Illumina Hi-Seq to provide high coverage mRNA transcripts. These transcripts were then compared to reference genome (top in red), with mismatches indicating a possible site of editing activity. Here one such site is shown within the red box, with mismatched reads outlined in green. Alignment was generated using ClustalW (http://www.genome.jp/tools-bin/clustalw) [40].
List of top 10 miRs where ADAR editing of mRNAs alters complementarity to miR seed regions and either (A) creates novel target sites for regulation or (B) destroys predicted target sites. In addition to altered edit complementarity, microRNAs included were also required to be present at >50 reads per million in MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 small RNA-Seq datasets.
| miR | miRBase ID | Seed (RC) | Targets | Targets | Expected |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| hsa-miR-513a-5p | MIMAT0002877 | CCTGTGA | 258 | 0 | 0.63 |
| hsa-miR-450b-3p | MIMAT0004910 | GATCCCA | 252 | 4 | 0.79 |
| hsa-miR-769–3p | MIMAT0003887 | GATCCCA | 252 | 4 | 0.79 |
| hsa-miR-6089 | MIMAT0023714 | CGGCCTC | 219 | 0 | 3.83 |
| hsa-miR-4691–3p | MIMAT0019782 | GTGGCTG | 181 | 0 | 1.16 |
| hsa-miR-3189–3p | MIMAT0015071 | CCCAAGG | 140 | 5 | 0.48 |
| hsa-miR-140–3p | MIMAT0004597 | CTGTGGT | 139 | 0 | 1.11 |
| hsa-miR-3065–3p | MIMAT0015378 | GGTGCTG | 118 | 0 | 0.5 |
| hsa-miR-3940–3p | MIMAT0018356 | CCGGGCT | 111 | 0 | 0.72 |
| hsa-miR-3680–3p | MIMAT0018107 | ATGCAAA | 108 | 2 | 0.82 |
| hsa-miR-5089–5p | MIMAT0021081 | AATCCCA | 0 | 644 | 21.39 |
| hsa-miR-6504–3p | MIMAT0025465 | CTGTAAT | 58 | 587 | 19.93 |
| hsa-miR-6506–5p | MIMAT0025468 | ATCCCAG | 18 | 377 | 21.57 |
| hsa-miR-619–5p | MIMAT0026622 | ATCCCAG | 18 | 377 | 21.57 |
| hsa-miR-4775 | MIMAT0019931 | AAAATTA | 0 | 351 | 19.37 |
| hsa-miR-4735–5p | MIMAT0019860 | AAATTAG | 6 | 305 | 17.31 |
| hsa-miR-6514–3p | MIMAT0025485 | ACAGGCA | 10 | 216 | 9.59 |
| hsa-miR-4794 | MIMAT0019967 | TAGCCAG | 10 | 173 | 8.05 |
| hsa-miR-664a-5p | MIMAT0005948 | TAGCCAG | 10 | 173 | 8.05 |
| hsa-miR-1273e | MIMAT0018079 | TCAAGCA | 2 | 169 | 5.22 |
Figure 4.A-to-I edits create novel target sites for miR-140–3p. mRNA sequences from the edit sites previously identified [37] (each consisting of a central A-to-I deamination and 100 nt flanks) were screened for complementarity to human miRNAs. The graphs represent all miR-140–3p seed matches occurring at each possible position within both the unedited (left) and edited (right) states.
Figure 5.MiR-140 can regulate DFFA in MCF-7, but not MDA-MB-231. (A) Alignment of 21 nt segments of six RNA-Seq reads (three from each cell line) to a portion of the apoptosis inducing gene DFFA. Our edit identification algorithm identified an A-to-G edit site at basepair 10,460,668 on Chromosome 1, and corresponding reads mapping to that location were extracted and trimmed to 21 bp (edit site plus/minus 10 bp flanking regions). Edit location is outlined in red. The alignment was generated via ClustalW [40]. (B) Illustration showing complimentary base pairing between the miR-140 seed (blue) and the DFFA gene in both cell lines. The edit site is indicated in green.
Figure 6.Depletion of DFFA protein expression and the effect of miR-140–3p on cellular growth. (A) Representative blots for DFFA and β-actin (loading control) are shown (n = 3). The miRNA is able to bind and regulate the DFFA gene in MCF-7, but not in MDA-MB-231 due the presence of an A-to-I edit. WT, wild type; Ctl, empty lipo transfection; Ant-140, miR-140 antagomir; Ant-Ctl, random antagomir. (B) Cell growth assay examining effects of transfecting a miR-140 inhibitor in both cell lines. Five microscopic fields randomly chosen from each assay were counted individually, and the statistical significance between treatment and control determined by t-test.