Cathepsin B S-nitrosylation promotes ADAR1-mediated editing of its own mRNA transcript via an ADD1/MATR3 regulatory axis.
Zhe LinShuang ZhaoXuesong LiZian MiaoJiawei CaoYurong ChenZhiguang ShiJia ZhangDongjin WangShaoliang ChenLiansheng WangAihua GuFeng ChenTao YangKangyun SunYi HanLi-Ping XieHongshan ChenYong JiPublished in: Cell research (2023)
Genetic information is generally transferred from RNA to protein according to the classic "Central Dogma". Here, we made a striking discovery that post-translational modification of a protein specifically regulates the editing of its own mRNA. We show that S-nitrosylation of cathepsin B (CTSB) exclusively alters the adenosine-to-inosine (A-to-I) editing of its own mRNA. Mechanistically, CTSB S-nitrosylation promotes the dephosphorylation and nuclear translocation of ADD1, leading to the recruitment of MATR3 and ADAR1 to CTSB mRNA. ADAR1-mediated A-to-I RNA editing enables the binding of HuR to CTSB mRNA, resulting in increased CTSB mRNA stability and subsequently higher steady-state levels of CTSB protein. Together, we uncovered a unique feedforward mechanism of protein expression regulation mediated by the ADD1/MATR3/ADAR1 regulatory axis. Our study demonstrates a novel reverse flow of information from the post-translational modification of a protein back to the post-transcriptional regulation of its own mRNA precursor. We coined this process as "Protein-directed EDiting of its Own mRNA by ADAR1 (PEDORA)" and suggest that this constitutes an additional layer of protein expression control. "PEDORA" could represent a currently hidden mechanism in eukaryotic gene expression regulation.