figshare
Browse

The Dihydrouridine landscape from tRNA to mRNA: a perspective on synthesis, structural impact and function

Download (29.53 MB)
media
posted on 2022-05-31, 06:20 authored by Olivier Finet, Carlo Yague-Sanz, Florian Marchand, Damien Hermand

The universal dihydrouridine (D) epitranscriptomic mark results from a reduction of uridine by the Dus family of NADPH-dependent reductases and is typically found within the eponym D-loop of tRNAs. Despite its apparent simplicity, D is structurally unique, with the potential to deeply affect the RNA backbone and many, if not all, RNA-connected processes. The first landscape of its occupancy within the tRNAome was reported 20 years ago. Its potential biological significance was highlighted by observations ranging from a strong bias in its ecological distribution to the predictive nature of Dus enzymes overexpression for worse cancer patient outcomes. The exquisite specificity of the Dus enzymes revealed by a structure-function analyses and accumulating clues that the D distribution may expand beyond tRNAs recently led to the development of new high-resolution mapping methods, including Rho-seq that established the presence of D within mRNAs and led to the demonstration of its critical physiological relevance.

Funding

This work was supported by the FNRS and PDR T.0012.14, CDR J.0066.16, PDR T.0112.21 to D.H.

History

Usage metrics

    RNA Biology

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC