AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study focuses on the modification of the guanine nucleobase (8-oxoG) due to oxidation, which is linked to various diseases, and addresses the need for effective detection methods for this modification in RNA.
  • - Researchers developed a technique called ChLoRox-Seq that enriches RNA fragments containing 8-oxoG using biotin without the need for antibodies, allowing them to analyze RNA oxidation at a higher resolution and lower cost compared to existing methods.
  • - Using ChLoRox-Seq on mRNA from human lung cells exposed to stress, the study found that 8-oxoG modifications predominantly occur in G-rich regions and longer mRNA transcripts, suggesting a probabilistic nature of these oxidation

Article Abstract

Bulk increases in nucleobase oxidation, most commonly manifesting as the guanine (G) nucleobase modification 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (8-oxoG), have been linked to several disease pathologies. Elucidating the effects of RNA oxidation on cellular homoeostasis is limited by a lack of effective tools for detecting specific regions modified with 8-oxoG. Building on a previously published method for studying 8-oxoG in DNA, we developed ChLoRox-Seq, which works by covalently functionalizing 8-oxoG sites in RNA with biotin. Importantly, this method enables antibody-free enrichment of 8-oxoG-containing RNA fragments for Next Generation Sequencing-based detection of modified regions transcriptome-wide. We demonstrate the high specificity of ChLoRox-Seq for functionalizing 8-oxoG over unmodified nucleobases in RNA and benchmark this specificity to a commonly used antibody-based approach. Key advantages of ChLoRox-Seq include: (1) heightened resolution of RNA oxidation regions (e.g. exon-level) and (2) lower experimental costs. By applying ChLoRox-Seq to mRNA extracted from human lung epithelial cells (BEAS-2B) after exposure to environmentally relevant stress, we observe that 8-oxoG modifications tend to cluster in regions that are G-rich and within mRNA transcripts possessing longer 5' UTR and CDS regions. These findings provide new insight into the complex mechanisms that bias the accumulation of RNA oxidation across the transcriptome. Notably, our analysis suggests the possibility that most mRNA oxidation events are probabilistically driven and that mRNAs that possess more favourable intrinsic properties are prone to incur oxidation events at elevated rates. ChLoRox-Seq can be readily applied in future studies to identify regions of elevated RNA oxidation in any cellular model of interest.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11581162PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15476286.2024.2427903DOI Listing

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