학술논문

Dynamic landscape and regulation of RNA editing in mammals
Document Type
article
Author
Aguet, FrançoisArdlie, Kristin GCummings, Beryl BGelfand, Ellen TGetz, GadHadley, KaneHandsaker, Robert EHuang, Katherine HKashin, SevaKarczewski, Konrad JLek, MonkolLi, XiaoMacArthur, Daniel GNedzel, Jared LNguyen, Duyen TNoble, Michael SSegrè, Ayellet VTrowbridge, Casandra ATukiainen, TaruAbell, Nathan SBalliu, BrunildaBarshir, RuthBasha, OmerBattle, AlexisBogu, Gireesh KBrown, AndrewBrown, Christopher DCastel, Stephane EChen, Lin SChiang, ColbyConrad, Donald FCox, Nancy JDamani, Farhan NDavis, Joe RDelaneau, OlivierDermitzakis, Emmanouil TEngelhardt, Barbara EEskin, EleazarFerreira, Pedro GFrésard, LaureGamazon, Eric RGarrido-Martín, DiegoGewirtz, Ariel DHGliner, GennaGloudemans, Michael JGuigo, RodericHall, Ira MHan, BuhmHe, YuanHormozdiari, FarhadHowald, CedricKyung Im, HaeJo, BrianYong Kang, EunKim, YungilKim-Hellmuth, SarahLappalainen, TuuliLi, GenLi, XinLiu, BoxiangMangul, SergheiMcCarthy, Mark IMcDowell, Ian CMohammadi, PejmanMonlong, JeanMontgomery, Stephen BMuñoz-Aguirre, ManuelNdungu, Anne WNicolae, Dan LNobel, Andrew BOliva, MeritxellOngen, HalitPalowitch, John JPanousis, NikolaosPapasaikas, PanagiotisPark, YoSonParsana, PrincyPayne, Anthony JPeterson, Christine BQuan, JieReverter, FerranSabatti, ChiaraSaha, AshisSammeth, MichaelScott, Alexandra JShabalin, Andrey ASodaei, RezaStephens, MatthewStranger, Barbara EStrober, Benjamin JSul, Jae HoonTsang, Emily KUrbut, Sarahvan de Bunt, MartijnWang, GaoWen, XiaoquanWright, Fred AXi, Hualin SYeger-Lotem, EstiZappala, Zachary
Source
Nature. 550(7675)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Genetics
Adenosine Deaminase
Animals
Female
Genotype
HEK293 Cells
Humans
Male
Mice
Muscles
Nuclear Proteins
Organ Specificity
Primates
Proteolysis
RNA Editing
RNA-Binding Proteins
Spatio-Temporal Analysis
Species Specificity
Transcriptome
GTEx Consortium
Laboratory
Data Analysis &Coordinating Center (LDACC)—Analysis Working Group
Statistical Methods groups—Analysis Working Group
Enhancing GTEx (eGTEx) groups
NIH Common Fund
NIH/NCI
NIH/NHGRI
NIH/NIMH
NIH/NIDA
Biospecimen Collection Source Site—NDRI
Biospecimen Collection Source Site—RPCI
Biospecimen Core Resource—VARI
Brain Bank Repository—University of Miami Brain Endowment Bank
Leidos Biomedical—Project Management
ELSI Study
Genome Browser Data Integration &Visualization—EBI
Genome Browser Data Integration &Visualization—UCSC Genomics Institute
University of California Santa Cruz
General Science & Technology
Language
Abstract
Adenosine-to-inosine (A-to-I) RNA editing is a conserved post-transcriptional mechanism mediated by ADAR enzymes that diversifies the transcriptome by altering selected nucleotides in RNA molecules. Although many editing sites have recently been discovered, the extent to which most sites are edited and how the editing is regulated in different biological contexts are not fully understood. Here we report dynamic spatiotemporal patterns and new regulators of RNA editing, discovered through an extensive profiling of A-to-I RNA editing in 8,551 human samples (representing 53 body sites from 552 individuals) from the Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) project and in hundreds of other primate and mouse samples. We show that editing levels in non-repetitive coding regions vary more between tissues than editing levels in repetitive regions. Globally, ADAR1 is the primary editor of repetitive sites and ADAR2 is the primary editor of non-repetitive coding sites, whereas the catalytically inactive ADAR3 predominantly acts as an inhibitor of editing. Cross-species analysis of RNA editing in several tissues revealed that species, rather than tissue type, is the primary determinant of editing levels, suggesting stronger cis-directed regulation of RNA editing for most sites, although the small set of conserved coding sites is under stronger trans-regulation. In addition, we curated an extensive set of ADAR1 and ADAR2 targets and showed that many editing sites display distinct tissue-specific regulation by the ADAR enzymes in vivo. Further analysis of the GTEx data revealed several potential regulators of editing, such as AIMP2, which reduces editing in muscles by enhancing the degradation of the ADAR proteins. Collectively, our work provides insights into the complex cis- and trans-regulation of A-to-I editing.