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Mapping of pseudouridine residues on cellular and viral transcripts using a novel antibody-based technique

Publication ,  Journal Article
Campos, CM; Tsai, K; Courtney, D; Bogerd, H; Holley, C; Cullen, B
2021

Pseudouridine (Ψ) is the most common non-canonical ribonucleoside present on mammalian non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs), including rRNAs, tRNAs and snRNAs, where it contributes ∼7% of the total uridine level. However, Ψ constitutes only ∼0.1% of the uridines present on mRNAs and its effect on mRNA function remains unclear. Ψ residues have been shown to inhibit the detection of exogenous RNA transcripts by host innate immune factors, thus raising the possibility that viruses might have subverted the addition of Ψ residues to mRNAs by host pseudouridine synthase (PUS) enzymes as a way to inhibit antiviral responses in infected cells. Here, we describe and validate a novel antibody-based Ψ mapping technique called photo-crosslinking assisted Ψ sequencing (PA-Ψ-seq) and use it to map Ψ residues on not only multiple cellular RNAs but also on the mRNAs and genomic RNA encoded by HIV-1. We describe several 293T-derived cell lines in which human PUS enzymes previously reported to add Ψ residues to human mRNAs, specifically PUS1, PUS7 and TRUB1/PUS4, were inactivated by gene editing. Surprisingly, while this allowed us to assign several sites of Ψ addition on cellular mRNAs to each of these three PUS enzymes, the Ψ sites present on HIV-1 transcripts remained unaffected. Moreover, loss of PUS1, PUS7 or TRUB1 function did not significantly reduce the level of Ψ residues detected on total human mRNA below the ∼0.1% level seen in wild type cells, thus implying that the PUS enzyme(s) that adds the bulk of Ψ residues to human mRNAs remains to be defined.

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Publication Date

2021
 

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Campos, C. M., Tsai, K., Courtney, D., Bogerd, H., Holley, C., & Cullen, B. (2021). Mapping of pseudouridine residues on cellular and viral transcripts using a novel antibody-based technique. https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.05.01.442255
Campos, Cecilia Martinez, Kevin Tsai, David Courtney, Hal Bogerd, Christopher Holley, and Bryan Cullen. “Mapping of pseudouridine residues on cellular and viral transcripts using a novel antibody-based technique,” 2021. https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.05.01.442255.
Campos, Cecilia Martinez, et al. Mapping of pseudouridine residues on cellular and viral transcripts using a novel antibody-based technique. 2021. Epmc, doi:10.1101/2021.05.01.442255.

DOI

Publication Date

2021