Conserved spatiotemporal expression landscape of dominant tRNA genes in human and mouse.

Biochem Biophys Res Commun

Memphis University School, 6191 Park Ave, Memphis, TN, 38119, USA. Electronic address:

Published: November 2023

Transfer RNAs are integral for protein synthesis and the interpretation of the information contained in DNA. To date, a few methods, including custom microarrays and custom targeted sequencing, have been used to quantify tRNA. However, methods using available RNA-sequencing data have not yet been reported. We created a bioinformatics pipeline to quantify the highly expressed tRNAs in RNA-Seq effectively, demonstrated by the preserved ratio of the expression levels of two massively duplicated tRNA genes in mouse. Using this quantification, we examined the tRNA expression with relation to tissue type and developmental stage in both human and mouse. Heart exhibited the highest overall tRNA expression for both human and mouse. Furthermore, tRNA expression grew to a peak before decreasing steadily with developmental stage, a trend that was conserved in both human and mouse. The two mitochondrial tRNA genes, tRNA(TCA)(m) and tRNA(TTA)(m), which partly contribute to these trends, have been attributed to various human diseases. The tissue-specific high expression of tRNA(CAG) and tRNA(CAA) in human brains, especially in hindbrain and cerebellum, suggests their important roles in neurological disorders. In summary, our approach revealed conserved spatiotemporal expression of highly expressed tRNAs in both human and mouse. Our method can be applied to other RNA-Seq data to examine the roles of these tRNAs in different human diseases or scientific studies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbrc.2023.09.054DOI Listing

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