학술논문

METTL3-Mediated m6A Modification Controls Splicing Factor Abundance and Contributes to Aggressive CLL
Document Type
article
Source
Blood Cancer Discovery. 4(3)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Cancer
Genetics
Hematology
Rare Diseases
Lymphoma
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Humans
Alternative Splicing
Leukemia
Lymphocytic
Chronic
B-Cell
Proteomics
Methyltransferases
RNA Splicing Factors
RNA
Messenger
Language
Abstract
RNA splicing dysregulation underlies the onset and progression of cancers. In chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), spliceosome mutations leading to aberrant splicing occur in ∼20% of patients. However, the mechanism for splicing defects in spliceosome-unmutated CLL cases remains elusive. Through an integrative transcriptomic and proteomic analysis, we discover that proteins involved in RNA splicing are posttranscriptionally upregulated in CLL cells, resulting in splicing dysregulation. The abundance of splicing complexes is an independent risk factor for poor prognosis. Moreover, increased splicing factor expression is highly correlated with the abundance of METTL3, an RNA methyltransferase that deposits N6-methyladenosine (m6A) on mRNA. METTL3 is essential for cell growth in vitro and in vivo and controls splicing factor protein expression in a methyltransferase-dependent manner through m6A modification-mediated ribosome recycling and decoding. Our results uncover METTL3-mediated m6A modification as a novel regulatory axis in driving splicing dysregulation and contributing to aggressive CLL.SignificanceMETTL3 controls widespread splicing factor abundance via translational control of m6A-modified mRNA, contributes to RNA splicing dysregulation and disease progression in CLL, and serves as a potential therapeutic target in aggressive CLL. See related commentary by Janin and Esteller, p. 176. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 171.