Quantitative nucleotide resolution profiling of RNA cytidine acetylation by ac4C-seq.
Supuni Thalalla GamageAldema Sas-ChenSchraga SchwartzJordan L MeierPublished in: Nature protocols (2021)
A prerequisite to defining the transcriptome-wide functions of RNA modifications is the ability to accurately determine their location. Here, we present N4-acetylcytidine (ac4C) sequencing (ac4C-seq), a protocol for the quantitative single-nucleotide resolution mapping of cytidine acetylation in RNA. This method exploits the kinetically facile chemical reaction of ac4C with sodium cyanoborohydride under acidic conditions to form a reduced nucleobase. RNA is then fragmented, ligated to an adapter at its 3' end and reverse transcribed to introduce a non-cognate nucleotide at reduced ac4C sites. After adapter ligation, library preparation and high-throughput sequencing, a bioinformatic pipeline enables identification of ac4C positions on the basis of the presence of C→T misincorporations in reduced samples but not in controls. Unlike antibody-based approaches, ac4C-seq identifies specific ac4C residues and reports on their level of modification. The ac4C-seq library preparation protocol can be completed in ~4 d for transcriptome-wide sequencing.
Keyphrases
- highly efficient
- single cell
- genome wide
- rna seq
- randomized controlled trial
- high resolution
- dna methylation
- gene expression
- emergency department
- high throughput sequencing
- nucleic acid
- mass spectrometry
- ionic liquid
- quantum dots
- heat shock
- heat shock protein
- tandem mass spectrometry
- simultaneous determination
- metal organic framework