Literature DB >> 31656957

Protein-Encoding RNA to RNA Information Transfer in Mammalian Cells: RNA-dependent mRNA Amplification. Identification of Chimeric RNA Intermediates and Putative RNA End Products.

Sophia Rits1,2, Bjorn R Olsen3, Vladimir Volloch3.   

Abstract

Our initial unidirectional understanding of the flow of protein-encoding genetic information, DNA to RNA to protein, a process defined as the "Central Dogma of Molecular Biology" and usually depicted as a downward arrow, was eventually amended to account for the "vertical" information back-flow from RNA to DNA, reverse transcription, and for its "horizontal" side-flow from RNA to RNA, RNA-dependent RNA synthesis, RdRs. These processes, both potentially leading to protein production, were assumed to be strictly virus-specific. However, whereas this presumption might be true for the former, it became apparent that the cellular enzymatic machinery for the later, a conventional RNA-dependent RNA polymerase activity, RdRp, is ubiquitously present and RdRs regularly occurs in eukaryotes. The strongest evidence for the occurrence and functionality of RdRp activity in mammalian cells comes from viruses, such as hepatitis delta virus, HDV, that do not encode RdRp yet undergo a robust RNA replication once inside the host. Eventually, it became clear that RdRp activity, apparently in a non-conventional form, is constitutively present in most, if not in all, mammalian cells. Because such activity was shown to produce short transcripts, because of its apparent involvement in RNA interference phenomena, and because double-stranded RNA is known to trigger cellular responses leading to its degradation, it was generally assumed that its role in mammalian cells is restricted to a regulatory function. However, at the same time, an enzymatic activity capable of generating complete antisense RNA complements of mRNAs was discovered in mammalian cells undergoing terminal differentiation. Moreover, observations of widespread synthesis of antisense RNA initiating at the 3'poly(A) of mRNAs in human cells suggested an extensive cellular utilization of mammalian RdRp. These results led to the development of a model of RdRp-facilitated and antisense RNA-mediated amplification of mammalian mRNA. Here, we report the in vivo detection in cells undergoing terminal erythroid differentiation of the major model-predicted identifiers of such a process, a chimeric double-stranded/pinhead-structured intermediates containing both sense and antisense RNA strands covalently joined in a rigorously predicted and uniquely defined manner. We also report the identification of the putative chimeric RNA end product of mRNA amplification. It is heavily modified, uniformly truncated, yet retains the intact coding region, and terminates with the OH group at both ends; its massive cellular amount is unprecedented for a conventional mRNA transcription product and it translates into polypeptides indistinguishable from the translation product of conventional mRNA. Moreover, we describe the occurrence of the second Tier of mammalian RNA-dependent mRNA amplification, a physiologically occurring, RdRp-driven intracellular PCR process, "iPCR", and report the detection of its distinct RNA end products. Whether mammalian mRNA amplification is a specialized occurrence limited to extreme circumstances of terminal differentiation in cells programmed for only a short survival span or a general physiological phenomenon was answered in the companion article Volloch et al. Ann Integr Mol Med. 2019;1(1):1004. by the detection of major identifiers of this process for mRNA encoding α1, β1, and γ1 chains of laminin, a major extracellular matrix protein abundantly produced throughout the tissue and organ development and homeostasis and an exceptionally revealing indicator of the range and scope of this phenomenon. The results obtained introduce the occurrence of RNA-dependent mRNA amplification as a new mode of genomic protein-encoding information transfer in mammalian cells and establish it as a general physiological phenomenon.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Antisense-strand RNA; Chimeric RNA; Physiologically occurring intracellular PCR, iPCR; RNA-dependent RNA polymerase, RdRp; RNA-dependent amplification of mammalian mRNA; Sense-strand RNA

Year:  2019        PMID: 31656957      PMCID: PMC6814175     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Integr Mol Med


  63 in total

1.  Identification of a novel aspartic protease (Asp 2) as beta-secretase.

Authors:  I Hussain; D Powell; D R Howlett; D G Tew; T D Meek; C Chapman; I S Gloger; K E Murphy; C D Southan; D M Ryan; T S Smith; D L Simmons; F S Walsh; C Dingwall; G Christie
Journal:  Mol Cell Neurosci       Date:  1999-12       Impact factor: 4.314

2.  Uncoupling of the synthesis of edited and unedited COIII RNA in Trypanosoma brucei.

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Review 3.  Poliovirus RNA replication.

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Journal:  Curr Top Microbiol Immunol       Date:  1990       Impact factor: 4.291

Review 4.  The N-end rule pathway of protein degradation.

Authors:  A Varshavsky
Journal:  Genes Cells       Date:  1997-01       Impact factor: 1.891

Review 5.  Pathways of Unconventional Protein Secretion.

Authors:  Catherine Rabouille
Journal:  Trends Cell Biol       Date:  2016-12-16       Impact factor: 20.808

6.  Discovery of an Orally Available, Brain Penetrant BACE1 Inhibitor that Affords Robust CNS Aβ Reduction.

Authors:  Andrew W Stamford; Jack D Scott; Sarah W Li; Suresh Babu; Dawit Tadesse; Rachael Hunter; Yusheng Wu; Jeffrey Misiaszek; Jared N Cumming; Eric J Gilbert; Chunli Huang; Brian A McKittrick; Liwu Hong; Tao Guo; Zhaoning Zhu; Corey Strickland; Peter Orth; Johannes H Voigt; Matthew E Kennedy; Xia Chen; Reshma Kuvelkar; Robert Hodgson; Lynn A Hyde; Kathleen Cox; Leonard Favreau; Eric M Parker; William J Greenlee
Journal:  ACS Med Chem Lett       Date:  2012-07-12       Impact factor: 4.345

7.  Methylmercury hydroxide enhancement of translation and transcription of ovalbumin and conalbumin mRNA's.

Authors:  F Payvar; R T Schimke
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1979-08-25       Impact factor: 5.157

8.  Intracellular generation of amyloid beta-protein from amyloid beta-protein precursor fragment by direct cleavage with beta- and gamma-secretase.

Authors:  T Iizuka; M Shoji; T Kawarabayashi; M Sato; T Kobayashi; N Tada; K Kasai; E Matsubara; M Watanabe; Y Tomidokoro; S Hirai
Journal:  Biochem Biophys Res Commun       Date:  1996-01-05       Impact factor: 3.575

9.  Hepatitis delta virus RNA replication.

Authors:  Chung-Hsin Tseng; Michael M C Lai
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2009-11-06       Impact factor: 5.048

10.  BACE1 deletion in the adult mouse reverses preformed amyloid deposition and improves cognitive functions.

Authors:  Xiangyou Hu; Brati Das; Hailong Hou; Wanxia He; Riqiang Yan
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  2018-02-14       Impact factor: 14.307

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  5 in total

1.  Alzheimer's Disease is Driven by Intraneuronally Retained Beta-Amyloid Produced in the AD-Specific, βAPP-Independent Pathway: Current Perspective and Experimental Models for Tomorrow.

Authors:  Vladimir Volloch; Bjorn Olsen; Sophia Rits
Journal:  Ann Integr Mol Med       Date:  2020

2.  Precursor-Independent Overproduction of Beta-Amyloid in AD: Mitochondrial Dysfunction as Possible Initiator of Asymmetric RNA-Dependent βAPP mRNA Amplification. An Engine that Drives Alzheimer's Disease.

Authors:  Vladimir Volloch; Bjorn R Olsen; Sophia Rits
Journal:  Ann Integr Mol Med       Date:  2019-11-20

3.  RNA-dependent Amplification of Mammalian mRNA Encoding Extracellullar Matrix Proteins: Identification of Chimeric RNA Intermediates for α1, β1, and γ1 Chains of Laminin.

Authors:  Vladimir Volloch; Sophia Rits; Bjorn R Olsen
Journal:  Ann Integr Mol Med       Date:  2019-08-25

Review 4.  Role of m6A in osteoporosis, arthritis and osteosarcoma (Review).

Authors:  Yibo Hu; Xiaohui Zhao
Journal:  Exp Ther Med       Date:  2021-06-30       Impact factor: 2.447

5.  The Amyloid Cascade Hypothesis 2.0: On the Possibility of Once-in-a-Lifetime-Only Treatment for Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease and for Its Potential Cure at Symptomatic Stages.

Authors:  Vladimir Volloch; Sophia Rits-Volloch
Journal:  J Alzheimers Dis Rep       Date:  2022-07-11
  5 in total

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