AI Article Synopsis

  • Ribonucleases are enzymes that control RNA breakdown in cells, crucial for technologies like RNA interference and CRISPR, but traditional methods have limitations that prompted the search for targeted small molecules for RNA degradation.
  • Click-degraders are innovative small molecules that can attach to RNA using click-chemistry and effectively degrade it, leading to the development of meCLICK-Seq, a method that identifies RNA modification substrates with precision.
  • The meCLICK-Seq technique enables the mapping of RNA methylation, reveals METTL16's role in RNA processing, and allows for a dynamic analysis of RNA modifications across the transcriptome, using a depletion approach for detecting modified RNA.

Article Abstract

The fates of RNA species in a cell are controlled by ribonucleases, which degrade them by exploiting the universal structural 2'-OH group. This phenomenon plays a key role in numerous transformative technologies, for example, RNA interference and CRISPR/Cas13-based RNA editing systems. These approaches, however, are genetic or oligomer-based and so have inherent limitations. This has led to interest in the development of small molecules capable of degrading nucleic acids in a targeted manner. Here we describe click-degraders, small molecules that can be covalently attached to RNA species through click-chemistry and can degrade them, that are akin to ribonucleases. By using these molecules, we have developed the meCLICK-Seq (methylation CLICK-degradation Sequencing) a method to identify RNA modification substrates with high resolution at intronic and intergenic regions. The method hijacks RNA methyltransferase activity to introduce an alkyne, instead of a methyl, moiety on RNA. Subsequent copper(I)-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition reaction with the click-degrader leads to RNA cleavage and degradation exploiting a mechanism used by endogenous ribonucleases. Focusing on N-methyladenosine (mA), meCLICK-Seq identifies methylated transcripts, determines RNA methylase specificity, and reliably maps modification sites in intronic and intergenic regions. Importantly, we show that METTL16 deposits mA to intronic polyadenylation (IPA) sites, which suggests a potential role for METTL16 in IPA and, in turn, splicing. Unlike other methods, the readout of meCLICK-Seq is depletion, not enrichment, of modified RNA species, which allows a comprehensive and dynamic study of RNA modifications throughout the transcriptome, including regions of low abundance. The click-degraders are highly modular and so may be exploited to study any RNA modification and design new technologies that rely on RNA degradation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7760485PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscentsci.0c01094DOI Listing

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