Malat1 affects transcription and splicing through distinct pathways in mouse embryonic stem cells.
Morteza AslanzadehLaura StanicekMarcel TarbierEmilio Mármol-SánchezInna BiryukovaMarc R FriedländerPublished in: NAR genomics and bioinformatics (2024)
Malat1 is a long-noncoding RNA with critical roles in gene regulation and cancer metastasis, however its functional role in stem cells is largely unexplored. We here perform a nuclear knockdown of Malat1 in mouse embryonic stem cells, causing the de-regulation of 320 genes and aberrant splicing of 90 transcripts, some of which potentially affecting the translated protein sequence. We find evidence that Malat1 directly interacts with gene bodies and aberrantly spliced transcripts, and that it locates upstream of down-regulated genes at their putative enhancer regions, in agreement with functional genomics data. Consistent with this, we find these genes affected at both exon and intron levels, suggesting that they are transcriptionally regulated by Malat1. Besides, the down-regulated genes are regulated by specific transcription factors and bear both activating and repressive chromatin marks, suggesting that some of them might be regulated by bivalent promoters. We propose a model in which Malat1 facilitates the transcription of genes involved in chromatid dynamics and mitosis in one pathway, and affects the splicing of transcripts that are themselves involved in RNA processing in a distinct pathway. Lastly, we compare our findings with Malat1 perturbation studies performed in other cell systems and in vivo .