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Exploration of CCA-added RNAs revealed the expression of mitochondrial non-coding RNAs regulated by CCA-adding enzyme

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posted on 2019-09-06, 09:23 authored by Kamlesh Pawar, Megumi Shigematsu, Phillipe Loher, Shozo Honda, Isidore Rigoutsos, Yohei Kirino

Post-transcriptional non-template additions of nucleotides to 3′-ends of RNAs play important roles in the stability and function of RNA molecules. Although tRNA nucleotidyltransferase (CCA-adding enzyme) is known to add CCA trinucleotides to 3′-ends of tRNAs, whether other RNA species can be endogenous substrates of CCA-adding enzyme has not been widely explored yet. Herein, we used YAMAT-seq to identify non-tRNA substrates of CCA-adding enzyme. YAMAT-seq captures RNA species that form secondary structures with 4-nt protruding 3′-ends of the sequence 5′-NCCA-3′, which is the hallmark structure of RNAs that are generated by CCA-adding enzyme. By executing YAMAT-seq for human breast cancer cells and mining the sequence data, we identified novel candidate substrates of CCA-adding enzyme. These included fourteen ‘CCA-RNAs’ that only contain CCA as non-genomic sequences, and eleven ‘NCCA-RNAs’ that contain CCA and other nucleotides as non-genomic sequences. All newly-identified (N)CCA-RNAs were derived from the mitochondrial genome and were localized in mitochondria. Knockdown of CCA-adding enzyme severely reduced the expression levels of (N)CCA-RNAs, suggesting that the CCA-adding enzyme-catalyzed CCA additions stabilize the expression of (N)CCA-RNAs. Furthermore, expression levels of (N)CCA-RNAs were severely reduced by various cellular treatments, including UV irradiation, amino acid starvation, inhibition of mitochondrial respiratory complexes, and inhibition of the cell cycle. These results revealed a novel CCA-mediated regulatory pathway for the expression of mitochondrial non-coding RNAs.

Funding

This work was supported by National Institute of General Medical Sciences [GM106047]; National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases[AI130496];the American Cancer Society [RSG-17-059-01-RMC]; The W.W. Smith Charitable Trust [C1608].

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