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ADARs act as potent regulators of circular transcriptome in cancer.

Haoqing ShenOmer AnXi RenYangyang SongSze Jing TangXin-Yu KeJian HanDaryl Jin Tai TayVanessa Hui En NgFernando Bellido MoliasPriyankaa PitcheshwarKa Wai LeongKer Kan TanHenry YangLeilei Chen
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are produced by head-to-tail back-splicing which is mainly facilitated by base-pairing of reverse complementary matches (RCMs) in circRNA flanking introns. Adenosine deaminases acting on RNA (ADARs) are known to bind double-stranded RNAs for adenosine to inosine (A-to-I) RNA editing. Here we characterize ADARs as potent regulators of circular transcriptome by identifying over a thousand of circRNAs regulated by ADARs in a bidirectional manner through and beyond their editing function. We find that editing can stabilize or destabilize secondary structures formed between RCMs via correcting A:C mismatches to I(G)-C pairs or creating I(G).U wobble pairs, respectively. We provide experimental evidence that editing also favors the binding of RNA-binding proteins such as PTBP1 to regulate back-splicing. These ADARs-regulated circRNAs which are ubiquitously expressed in multiple types of cancers, demonstrate high functional relevance to cancer. Our findings support a hitherto unappreciated bidirectional regulation of circular transcriptome by ADARs and highlight the complexity of cross-talk in RNA processing and its contributions to tumorigenesis.
Keyphrases
  • crispr cas
  • papillary thyroid
  • rna seq
  • single cell
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • transcription factor
  • squamous cell
  • childhood cancer
  • protein kinase
  • mass spectrometry