RNA Pol II-dependent transcription efficiency fine-tunes A-to-I editing levels

Genome Res. 2024 Mar 20;34(2):231-242. doi: 10.1101/gr.277686.123.

Abstract

A-to-I RNA editing is a widespread epitranscriptomic phenomenon leading to the conversion of adenosines to inosines, which are primarily interpreted as guanosines by cellular machines. Consequently, A-to-I editing can alter splicing or lead to recoding of transcripts. As misregulation of editing can cause a variety of human diseases, A-to-I editing requires tight regulation of the extent of deamination, particularly in protein-coding regions. The bulk of A-to-I editing occurs cotranscriptionally. Thus, we studied A-to-I editing regulation in the context of transcription and pre-mRNA processing. We show that stimulation of transcription impacts editing levels. Activation of the transcription factor MYC leads to an up-regulation of A-to-I editing, particularly in transcripts that are suppressed upon MYC activation. Moreover, low pre-mRNA synthesis rates and low pre-mRNA expression levels support high levels of editing. We also show that editing levels greatly differ between nascent pre-mRNA and mRNA in a cellular system, as well as in mouse tissues. Editing levels can increase or decrease from pre-mRNA to mRNA and can vary across editing targets and across tissues, showing that pre-mRNA processing is an important layer of editing regulation. Several lines of evidence suggest that the differences emerge during pre-mRNA splicing. Moreover, actinomycin D treatment of primary neuronal cells and editing level analysis suggests that regulation of editing levels also depends on transcription.

MeSH terms

  • Adenosine Deaminase / genetics
  • Animals
  • Humans
  • Mice
  • RNA Polymerase II* / genetics
  • RNA Precursors* / genetics
  • RNA Precursors* / metabolism
  • RNA Splicing
  • RNA, Messenger / metabolism
  • Transcription, Genetic

Substances

  • RNA Polymerase II
  • RNA Precursors
  • RNA, Messenger
  • Adenosine Deaminase