Quaking regulates circular RNA production in cardiomyocytes.
Pablo Montañés-AgudoIngeborg van der MadeSimona AufieroAnke J TijsenYigal M PintoEsther E CreemersPublished in: Journal of cell science (2023)
Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are a class of non-coding RNA molecules that are gaining increasing attention for their roles in various pathophysiological processes. The RNA-binding protein Quaking (QKI) has been identified as a regulator of circRNA formation. In this study, we investigate the role of QKI in the formation of circRNAs in the heart by performing RNA-sequencing on Qki knock-out mice. Loss of QKI resulted in the differential expression of 17% of the circRNAs in adult mouse hearts. Interestingly, the majority of the QKI-regulated circRNAs (58%) were derived from genes undergoing QKI-dependent splicing, indicating a relation between back-splicing and linear splicing. We compared these QKI-dependent circRNAs with those regulated by RBM20, another cardiac splicing factor essential for circRNA formation. We found that QKI and RBM20 regulate the formation of a distinct, but partially overlapping set of circRNAs in the heart. Strikingly, many shared circRNA were derived from the Ttn gene, and they were regulated in an opposite manner. Our findings indicate that QKI is not only regulating alternative splicing in the heart but also the formation of circRNAs.