RNA Modifications and RNA Metabolism in Neurological Disease Pathogenesis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. RNA Metabolism-Associated Neurological Disease Mechanisms
2.1. mRNA Splicing
2.2. mRNA Alternative Polyadenylation
2.3. mRNA Transport and Translation
2.4. mRNA Stability
2.5. miRNA Biogenesis
2.6. Roles for RBPs in RNA Metabolism and Neurological Diseases
3. RNA Modifications that Change RNA Metabolic Processes
3.1. m6A
3.2. m1A
RNA Modification | Effect on RNA Metabolism and/or Protein Function | Reader/Writer/Eraser | Mechanism | Neurological Functions/Diseases | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
m6A | mRNA stability | Writer: METTL3, METTL14 Reader: YTHDF2, YTHDF3, YTHDC2 | Readers selectively recognize and bind G-(m6 A)-C-containing mRNAs via their CTD, whereas the NTD localizes mRNP complexes at the cellular RNA degradation machinery | Neurogenesis | [135] |
Splicing, Transport | Reader: YTHDC1 | In the nucleus, this reader recognizes and binds pre-mRNAs with m6A methylation marks and selectively recruits SRSF3 to promote exon inclusion and nuclear-to-cytoplasmic transport of target mRNAs. | Facilitates neuron survival after brain injury and ischemic stroke | [120] | |
Transport, Translation | Reader: YTHDF1 | This reader recruits the mRNP complex to the cellular transport and translation machinery and activates protein translation | Facilitates learning and memory development | [116] | |
Translation | Eraser: FTO | In diseased neurons, FTO is translated and accumulates at axons, increasing m6A demethylation and NMDAR1 expression followed by neuronal apoptosis | PD | [115] | |
Translation | Writer: METTL3 Eraser: FTO | mRNA methylation controls expression of AD-related transcripts, but the underlying mechanism remains obscure | AD | [122] | |
m1A | tRNA stability/Translation | Writer: MRPP1 | Mitochondrial tRNA methylation causes stabilization of the tRNA to facilitate translational initiation. In disease conditions, improper processing of tRNAs results in reduced mitochondrial protein synthesis | HSD10 disease | [134] |
m5C | Translation | Writer: NSUN2 | In the absence of tRNA methylation, angiogenin-mediated tRNA cleavage causes an accumulation of tRNA fragments that activate stress-response pathways and impair translation | Dubowitz-like syndrome, Noonan like syndrome | [133] |
tRNA stability/Translation | Writer: DNMT2 | Methylation of tRNAs enhance their stability and facilitate their translation tRNA cleavage as a result of impaired m5C methylation limits translation in diseased neurons | Brain development and neurogenesis, embryogenesis | [136,137,138] | |
Pseudoeuridine | mRNA stability, Translation | Writer: PUS1 | Exact mechanism not yet known. It is likely the presence of pseudoeuridine reduces mRNA stability and impairs translation | AD | [139] |
RNA editing | Transport/Translation | Writer: ADAR2 | AMPA receptor pre-mRNA is edited by ADAR2 to regulate its function. Downregulation of ADAR2 causes reduced editing accompanied with functional defects of AMPAR under disease conditions | Schizophrenia, mood disorders | [140,141] |
3.3. m5C
3.4. Pseudouridine (Ψ)
3.5. RNA Editing
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Disease Type | Altered RNA Metabolism Pathway | RBP(s) Involved | Mechanisms | Neurological Disease(s) | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Neuro developmental diseases | Splicing, Translation | CPEB4 | Missplicing of CPEB4 causes reduced inclusion of a neuron-specific microexon, leading to diminished expression of the Cpeb4 transcript that activates translation of mRNAs via polyadenylation under normal conditions | ASD | [99] |
Splicing Translation, mRNA stability, miRNA biogenesis | RBFOX1, RBFOX2 (RBM9), RBFOX3 (Neun) | RBFOX1 binds to the 3′-UTR of its target mRNAs and regulates:
| ASD | [23,100,101,102] | |
Transport, Translation | FMRP | CGG repeat expansion beyond 200 (>200) at the 5′-UTR of FMR1 affects protein expression, resulting in dysregulated spatio-temporal transport/translation of dendritic mRNAs | FXS | [64] | |
APA | NUDT21 | Elevated amount of NUDT21, a subunit of pre-mRNA cleavage factor Im, due to copy number variation causes abnormal usage of polyadenylation sites, resulting in the generation of an inefficiently translated long isoform of MeCP2 protein. | Neuropsychia tric disease | [44] | |
Neuro degenerative diseases | Splicing | PRPF8 | Mutated Huntingtin (HTT) traps PRPF8 (a splicing factor) to cause CREB1 mis-splicing | HD | [18] |
Translation | HTT | Mutant HTT stalls ribosomes | HD | [72] | |
Splicing | MBNL family proteins | RNA corresponding to expanded microsatellite repeats in DMPK traps MBNL-family proteins, impairing their normal function in splicing | DM | [103] | |
Translation | ATAXIN-2 | CAG expansion in the reading frame of ATAXIN-2 causes loss of protein function that, under normal conditions, acts as an mRNA translation activator via polyadenylation | SCA2, ALS | [75] | |
RAN Translation, Abnormal RNA structure (RNA foci) | Matrin-3 | GGGGCC repeat expansion mutation in the C9orf72 gene causes sequestration of Matrin-3 at the RNA foci and RAN translated peptides and loss of function of Matrin-3 | FTLD, ALS | [104] | |
mRNA stability, Splicing, Translation | nELAVL | nELAVL regulates disease-specific splicing of the pre-mRNAs Picalm and Bin1 by incorporating exons 13 and 6a, respectively. The proteins corresponding to these spliced isoforms have been implicated in trafficking of amyloid precursor protein | AD | [105] | |
Transport, Translation, miRNA biogenesis | TDP-43 |
| FTLD, ALS | [63,106,107,108] | |
Transport, Translation | FUS | Normal FUS functions such as axonal transport/translation of mRNAs are adversely impacted in diseased neurons. Under disease conditions, the altered intracellular localization of FUS disrupts its functions as an RBP | FTLD, ALS | [109] | |
Splicing, miRNA biogenesis | hnRNPs, MBNL1 | mRNA corresponding to shorter CGG repeat expansions (<200) in the 5′UTR of FMR1 sequester many RBPs, e.g., hnRNPs and MBNL1 | Fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome (FXTAS) | [110] | |
APA | α-synuclein | Presence of an extended 3′-UTR region in α-synuclein transcript impacts accumulation of α-synuclein protein that is redirected away from synaptic terminals towards mitochondria | PD | [48] |
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Chatterjee, B.; Shen, C.-K.J.; Majumder, P. RNA Modifications and RNA Metabolism in Neurological Disease Pathogenesis. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2021, 22, 11870. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222111870
Chatterjee B, Shen C-KJ, Majumder P. RNA Modifications and RNA Metabolism in Neurological Disease Pathogenesis. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2021; 22(21):11870. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222111870
Chicago/Turabian StyleChatterjee, Biswanath, Che-Kun James Shen, and Pritha Majumder. 2021. "RNA Modifications and RNA Metabolism in Neurological Disease Pathogenesis" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 22, no. 21: 11870. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222111870
APA StyleChatterjee, B., Shen, C. -K. J., & Majumder, P. (2021). RNA Modifications and RNA Metabolism in Neurological Disease Pathogenesis. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 22(21), 11870. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222111870