Loss of Epitranscriptomic Modification N 6 -Methyladenosine (m 6 A) Reader YTHDF1 Exacerbates Ischemic Brain Injury in a Sexually Dimorphic Manner.

Anil K ChokkallaVijay ArruriSuresh L MehtaRaghu Vemuganti
Published in: Translational stroke research (2024)
N 6 -Methyladenosine (m 6 A) is a neuronal-enriched, reversible post-transcriptional modification that regulates RNA metabolism. The m 6 A-modified RNAs recruit various m 6 A-binding proteins that act as readers. Differential m 6 A methylation patterns are implicated in ischemic brain damage, yet the precise role of m 6 A readers in propagating post-stroke m 6 A signaling remains unclear. We presently evaluated the functional significance of the brain-enriched m 6 A reader YTHDF1, in post-stroke pathophysiology. Focal cerebral ischemia significantly increased YTHDF1 mRNA and protein expression in adult mice of both sexes. YTHDF1 -/- male, but not female, mice subjected to transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) showed worsened motor function recovery and increased infarction compared to sex-matched YTHDF1 +/+ mice. YTHDF1 -/- male, but not female, mice subjected to transient MCAO also showed significantly perturbed expression of genes related to inflammation, and increased infiltration of peripheral immune cells into the peri-infarct cortex, compared with sex-matched YTHDF1 +/+ mice. Thus, this study demonstrates a sexual dimorphism of YTHDF1 in regulating post-ischemic inflammation and pathophysiology. Hence, post-stroke epitranscriptomic regulation might be sex-dependent.