[HTML][HTML] Widespread A-to-I RNA editing of Alu-containing mRNAs in the human transcriptome

A Athanasiadis, A Rich, S Maas - PLoS biology, 2004 - journals.plos.org
A Athanasiadis, A Rich, S Maas
PLoS biology, 2004journals.plos.org
RNA editing by adenosine deamination generates RNA and protein diversity through the
posttranscriptional modification of single nucleotides in RNA sequences. Few mammalian A-
to-I edited genes have been identified despite evidence that many more should exist. Here
we identify intramolecular pairs of Alu elements as a major target for editing in the human
transcriptome. An experimental demonstration in 43 genes was extended by a broader
computational analysis of more than 100,000 human mRNAs. We find that 1,445 human …
RNA editing by adenosine deamination generates RNA and protein diversity through the posttranscriptional modification of single nucleotides in RNA sequences. Few mammalian A-to-I edited genes have been identified despite evidence that many more should exist. Here we identify intramolecular pairs of Alu elements as a major target for editing in the human transcriptome. An experimental demonstration in 43 genes was extended by a broader computational analysis of more than 100,000 human mRNAs. We find that 1,445 human mRNAs (1.4%) are subject to RNA editing at more than 14,500 sites, and our data further suggest that the vast majority of pre-mRNAs (greater than 85%) are targeted in introns by the editing machinery. The editing levels of Alu-containing mRNAs correlate with distance and homology between inverted repeats and vary in different tissues. Alu-mediated RNA duplexes targeted by RNA editing are formed intramolecularly, whereas editing due to intermolecular base-pairing appears to be negligible. We present evidence that these editing events can lead to the posttranscriptional creation or elimination of splice signals affecting alternatively spliced Alu-derived exons. The analysis suggests that modification of repetitive elements is a predominant activity for RNA editing with significant implications for cellular gene expression.
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