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Genetically encoded chemical crosslinking of RNA in vivo.

Wei SunNanxi WangHongjiang LiuBingchen YuLing JinXingjie RenYin ShenLei Wang
Published in: Nature chemistry (2022)
Protein-RNA interactions regulate RNA fate and function, and defects can lead to various disorders. Such interactions have mainly been studied by nucleoside-based UV crosslinking methods, which lack broad in vivo compatibility and the ability to resolve specific amino acids. In this study we genetically encoded latent bioreactive unnatural amino acids into proteins to react with bound RNA by proximity-enabled reactivity and demonstrated genetically encoded chemical crosslinking of proteins with target RNA (GECX-RNA) in vivo. Applying GECX-RNA to the RNA chaperone Hfq in Escherichia coli identified target RNAs with amino acid specificity. Combining GECX-RNA with immunoprecipitation and high-throughput sequencing of an N 6 -methyladenosine reader protein in mammalian cells allowed the in vivo identification of unknown N 6 -methyladenosine on RNA with single-nucleotide resolution throughout the transcriptome. GECX-RNA thus affords resolution at the nucleotide and amino acid level for interrogating protein-RNA interactions in vivo. It also enables the precise engineering of covalent linkages between a protein and RNA, which will inspire innovative solutions for RNA-related research and therapeutics.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • escherichia coli
  • nucleic acid
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • oxidative stress
  • single cell
  • rna seq
  • genome wide
  • single molecule
  • heat shock