Synapse-enriched m 6 A-modified Malat1 interacts with the novel m 6 A reader, DPYSL2, and is required for fear-extinction memory.
Sachithrani U MadugalleWei-Siang LiauQiong-Yi ZhaoXiang LiHao GongPaul R MarshallAmbika PeriyakaruppiahEsmi L ZajaczkowskiLaura J LeightonHaobin RenMason R B MusgroveJoshua W A DaviesGwangmin KimSimone RauchChuan HeBryan C DickinsonBarbora FulopovaLee N FletcherStephen R WilliamsRobert C SpitaleTimothy W BredyPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2023)
The RNA modification N 6 -methyladenosine (m 6 A) regulates the interaction between RNA and various RNA binding proteins within the nucleus and other subcellular compartments and has recently been shown to be involved in experience-dependent plasticity, learning, and memory. Using m 6 A RNA-sequencing, we have discovered a distinct population of learning-related m 6 A- modified RNAs at the synapse, which includes the long non-coding RNA metastasis associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1 ( Malat1 ). RNA immunoprecipitation and mass spectrometry revealed 12 new synapse-specific learning-induced m 6 A readers in the medial prefrontal cortex of male C57/BL6 mice, with m 6 A-modified Malat1 binding to a subset of these, including CYFIP2 and DPYSL2. In addition, a cell-type- and synapse-specific, and state-dependent, reduction of m 6 A on Malat1 impairs fear-extinction memory; an effect that likely occurs through a disruption in the interaction between Malat1 and DPYSL2 and an associated decrease in dendritic spine formation. These findings highlight the critical role of m 6 A in regulating the functional state of RNA during the consolidation of fear-extinction memory, and expand the repertoire of experience- dependent m 6 A readers in the synaptic compartment. Significance Statement We have discovered that learning-induced m 6 A-modified RNA (including the long noncoding RNA, Malat1 ) accumulates in the synaptic compartment. We have identified several new m 6 A readers that are associated with fear extinction learning and demonstrate a causal relationship between m 6 A-modified Malat1 and the formation of fear-extinction memory. These findings highlight the role of m 6 A in regulating the functional state of an RNA during memory formation and expand the repertoire of experience-dependent m 6 A readers in the synaptic compartment.