| Literature DB >> 32467309 |
Robert D Patton1, Manu Sanjeev1, Lauren A Woodward1, Justin W Mabin1, Ralf Bundschuh1, Guramrit Singh2.
Abstract
In eukaryotic cells, proteins that associate with RNA regulate its activity to control cellular function. To fully illuminate the basis of RNA function, it is essential to identify such RNA associated proteins, their mode of action on RNA, and their preferred RNA targets and binding sites. By analyzing catalogs of human RNA associated proteins defined by ultraviolet light (UV)-dependent and independent approaches, we classify these proteins into two major groups: (1) the widely-recognized RNA binding proteins (RBPs), which bind RNA directly and UV crosslink efficiently to RNA, and (2) a new group of RBP-associated factors (RAFs), which bind RNA indirectly via RBPs and UV crosslink poorly to RNA. As the UV cross-linking and immunoprecipitation followed by sequencing (CLIP-Seq) approach will be ill-suited to identify binding sites of RAFs, we show that formaldehyde crosslinking stabilizes RAFs within ribonucleoproteins to allow for their immunoprecipitation under stringent conditions. Using an RBP (CASC3) and an RAF (RNPS1) within the exon junction complex (EJC) as examples, we show that formaldehyde crosslinking combined with RNA immunoprecipitation in tandem followed by sequencing (xRIPiT-Seq) far exceeds CLIP-Seq to identify binding sites of RNPS1. xRIPiT-Seq reveals that RNPS1 occupancy is increased on exons immediately upstream of strong recursively spliced exons, which depend on EJC for their inclusion. Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the RNA Society.Entities:
Keywords: CLIP-Seq; RNA binding proteins; UV crosslinking; exon junction complex; formaldehyde crosslinking
Year: 2020 PMID: 32467309 DOI: 10.1261/rna.074856.120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RNA ISSN: 1355-8382 Impact factor: 4.942