| Literature DB >> 33905683 |
Anna Uzonyi1, Ronit Nir1, Ofir Shliefer2, Noam Stern-Ginossar1, Yaron Antebi1, Yonatan Stelzer3, Erez Y Levanon2, Schraga Schwartz4.
Abstract
Adenosine-to-inosine editing is catalyzed by ADAR1 at thousands of sites transcriptome-wide. Despite intense interest in ADAR1 from physiological, bioengineering, and therapeutic perspectives, the rules of ADAR1 substrate selection are poorly understood. Here, we used large-scale systematic probing of ∼2,000 synthetic constructs to explore the structure and sequence context determining editability. We uncover two structural layers determining the formation and propagation of A-to-I editing, independent of sequence. First, editing is robustly induced at fixed intervals of 35 bp upstream and 30 bp downstream of structural disruptions. Second, editing is symmetrically introduced on opposite sites on a double-stranded structure. Our findings suggest a recursive model for RNA editing, whereby the structural alteration induced by the editing at one site iteratively gives rise to the formation of an additional editing site at a fixed periodicity, serving as a basis for the propagation of editing along and across both strands of double-stranded RNA structures.Entities:
Keywords: A-to-I editing; ADAR1; RNA editing; adenosine; biotechnology; inosine; molecular biology; molecular genetics; systems biology; targeted editing
Year: 2021 PMID: 33905683 DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2021.03.024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell ISSN: 1097-2765 Impact factor: 17.970