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RIP-seq reveals LINE-1 ORF1p association with p-body enriched mRNAs. | LitMetric

RIP-seq reveals LINE-1 ORF1p association with p-body enriched mRNAs.

Mob DNA

Departments of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, New York University, 450 East 29th Street, Room 321, New York, NY, 10016, USA.

Published: February 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • LINE-1 is a retroelement that can insert copies of itself into the genome and is typically repressed in healthy cells, but its expression is found in nearly 50% of tumors, particularly prostate cancer.
  • Research identified that in androgen-independent prostate cancer cells, there are increased levels of LINE-1 RNA and different expression patterns compared to androgen-dependent cells.
  • The study also revealed that ORF1p, a LINE-1 protein, binds not only to LINE-1 RNA but also to various non-LINE-1 mRNAs, which may be relevant to the biology of prostate cancer as seen in tumor data from The Cancer Genome Atlas.

Article Abstract

Background: Long INterspersed Element-1 (LINE-1) is an autonomous retroelement able to "copy-and-paste" itself into new loci of the host genome through a process called retrotransposition. The LINE-1 bicistronic mRNA codes for two proteins, ORF1p, a nucleic acid chaperone, and ORF2p, a protein with endonuclease and reverse transcriptase activity. Both proteins bind LINE-1 mRNA in cis and are necessary for retrotransposition. While LINE-1 transcription is usually repressed in most healthy somatic cells through a plethora of mechanisms, ORF1p expression has been observed in nearly 50% of tumors, and new LINE-1 insertions have been documented in a similar fraction of tumors, including prostate cancer.

Results: Here, we utilized RNA ImmunoPrecipitation (RIP) and the L1EM analysis software to identify ORF1p bound RNA in prostate cancer cells. We identified LINE-1 loci that were expressed in parental androgen sensitive and androgen independent clonal derivatives. In all androgen independent cells, we found higher levels of LINE-1 RNA, as well as unique expression patterns of LINE-1 loci. Interestingly, we observed that ORF1p bound many non-LINE-1 mRNA in all prostate cancer cell lines evaluated, and polyA RNA, and RNA localized in p-bodies were especially enriched. Furthermore, the expression levels of RNAs identified in our ORF1p RIP correlated with RNAs expressed in LINE-1 positive tumors from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA).

Conclusion: Our results show a significant remodeling of LINE-1 loci expression in androgen independent cell lines when compared to parental androgen dependent cells. Additionally, we found that ORF1p bound a significant amount of non-LINE-1 mRNA, and that the enriched ORF1p bound mRNAs are also amplified in LINE-1 expressing TCGA prostate tumors, indicating the biological relevance of our findings to prostate cancer.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7874467PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13100-021-00233-3DOI Listing

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