阿达尔
RNA编辑
生物
核糖核酸
癌变
转录组
基因表达
基因
RNA剪接
阿波贝克
遗传学
分子生物学
基因组
作者
Jian Li,Qun Li,Chunpeng Yu,Shuai Chang,Lingling Xie,Song Wang
摘要
Adenosine-to-inosine (A-to-I) RNA editing is one of the most prevalent RNA modifications in the animal kingdom. Since inosine is recognized as guanosines, the A-to-I process mimics A-to-G DNA mutations but can be controlled in a more flexible manner compared to DNA alterations.We parsed the transcriptomes and translatomes of liver cancer and normal tissues from ten patients. We profiled the landscape of the A-to-I RNA editome in these samples and interrogated whether the A-to-I processes participated in the gene expression regulation in oncogenesis.Globally, editing activity was enhanced in all tumor samples compared to that in normal samples. Accordingly, expression of the gene encoding the RNA editing enzyme ADAR (adenosine deaminase acting on RNA) was elevated. Two intronic self-editing sites in ADAR mRNAs controlled its splicing pattern and may regulate its translation efficiency (TE). Moreover, the expression of oncogenes was generally upregulated in tumors, whereas tumor suppressor genes (TSG) were downregulated, possibly due to alterations to microRNA binding sites or RNA splicing defects caused by A-to-I editing.A-to-I RNA editing plays a crucial role in the oncogenesis of liver cancer. ADAR regulates its own expression via self-editing, and it also affects global transcriptomes and translatomes involving cancer-related genes by RNA editing and changing their expression patterns.
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