| Literature DB >> 33863890 |
Svetlana Kalmykova1, Marina Kalinina1, Stepan Denisov1, Alexey Mironov1, Dmitry Skvortsov2, Roderic Guigó3, Dmitri Pervouchine4.
Abstract
The ability of nucleic acids to form double-stranded structures is essential for all living systems on Earth. Current knowledge on functional RNA structures is focused on locally-occurring base pairs. However, crosslinking and proximity ligation experiments demonstrated that long-range RNA structures are highly abundant. Here, we present the most complete to-date catalog of conserved complementary regions (PCCRs) in human protein-coding genes. PCCRs tend to occur within introns, suppress intervening exons, and obstruct cryptic and inactive splice sites. Double-stranded structure of PCCRs is supported by decreased icSHAPE nucleotide accessibility, high abundance of RNA editing sites, and frequent occurrence of forked eCLIP peaks. Introns with PCCRs show a distinct splicing pattern in response to RNAPII slowdown suggesting that splicing is widely affected by co-transcriptional RNA folding. The enrichment of 3'-ends within PCCRs raises the intriguing hypothesis that coupling between RNA folding and splicing could mediate co-transcriptional suppression of premature pre-mRNA cleavage and polyadenylation.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33863890 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-22549-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919