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Human DUS1L catalyzes dihydrouridine modification at tRNA positions 16/17, and DUS1L overexpression perturbs translation. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Human tRNA modifications at positions 16 and 17, known as D16/D17, are produced by the enzyme DUS1L, which was identified as essential for these modifications in glioblastoma cells.
  • Knocking out DUS1L leads to a loss of D16/D17 modifications and negatively impacts cell growth while its overexpression disrupts tRNA processing and translation.
  • Higher levels of DUS1L in glioma patients correlate with worse prognoses, highlighting its potential role in cancer biology and the need for further research into its functions.

Article Abstract

Human cytoplasmic tRNAs contain dihydrouridine modifications at positions 16 and 17 (D16/D17). The enzyme responsible for D16/D17 formation and its cellular roles remain elusive. Here, we identify DUS1L as the human tRNA D16/D17 writer. DUS1L knockout in the glioblastoma cell lines LNZ308 and U87 causes loss of D16/D17. D formation is reconstituted in vitro using recombinant DUS1L in the presence of NADPH or NADH. DUS1L knockout/overexpression in LNZ308 cells shows that DUS1L supports cell growth. Moreover, higher DUS1L expression in glioma patients is associated with poorer prognosis. Upon vector-mediated DUS1L overexpression in LNZ308 cells, 5' and 3' processing of precursor tRNA is inhibited, resulting in a reduced mature tRNA level, reduced translation of the tyrosine codons UAC and UAU, and reduced translational readthrough of the near-cognate stop codons UAA and UAG. Moreover, DUS1L overexpression increases the amounts of several D16/D17-containing tRNAs and total cellular translation. Our study identifies a human dihydrouridine writer, providing the foundation to study its roles in health and disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11445529PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06942-8DOI Listing

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