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Dynamic RNA acetylation revealed by quantitative cross-evolutionary mapping.

Aldema Sas-ChenJustin M ThomasDonna MatzovMasato TaokaKellie D NanceRonit NirKeri M BrysonRan ShacharGeraldy L S LimanBrett W BurkhartSupuni Thalalla GamageYuko NobeChloe A BrineyMichaella J LevyRyan T FuchsGregory Brett RobbJesse HartmannSunny SharmaQishan LinLaurence FlorensMichael P WashburnToshiaki IsobeThomas J SantangeloMoran Shalev-BenamiJordan L MeierSchraga Schwartz
Published in: Nature (2020)
N4-acetylcytidine (ac4C) is an ancient and highly conserved RNA modification that is present on tRNA and rRNA and has recently been investigated in eukaryotic mRNA1-3. However, the distribution, dynamics and functions of cytidine acetylation have yet to be fully elucidated. Here we report ac4C-seq, a chemical genomic method for the transcriptome-wide quantitative mapping of ac4C at single-nucleotide resolution. In human and yeast mRNAs, ac4C sites are not detected but can be induced-at a conserved sequence motif-via the ectopic overexpression of eukaryotic acetyltransferase complexes. By contrast, cross-evolutionary profiling revealed unprecedented levels of ac4C across hundreds of residues in rRNA, tRNA, non-coding RNA and mRNA from hyperthermophilic archaea. Ac4C is markedly induced in response to increases in temperature, and acetyltransferase-deficient archaeal strains exhibit temperature-dependent growth defects. Visualization of wild-type and acetyltransferase-deficient archaeal ribosomes by cryo-electron microscopy provided structural insights into the temperature-dependent distribution of ac4C and its potential thermoadaptive role. Our studies quantitatively define the ac4C landscape, providing a technical and conceptual foundation for elucidating the role of this modification in biology and disease4-6.
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