Biochemical Profiling and Structural Basis of ADAR1-Mediated RNA Editing. Deng et. al.
Description
ADAR1 regulates RNA-induced immune responses by converting adenosine to inosine in double-stranded RNA. Mutations in ADAR1 are associated with human autoimmune disease, and targeting ADAR1 has been proposed for cancer immunotherapy. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying ADAR1-mediated editing remain unclear. Here, we provide detailed biochemical and structural characterizations of human ADAR1. Our biochemical profiling reveals that ADAR1 editing is both sequence and RNA duplex length-dependent but can well tolerate mismatches near the editing site. High-resolution ADAR1-RNA complex structures, combined with mutagenesis, elucidate RNA binding, substrate selection, dimerization, and the essential role of RNA-binding domain 3. The ADAR1 structures also help explain the potential defects of disease-associated mutations, where biochemical and RNA-sequencing analysis further indicate some of the mutations preferentially impact the editing of RNAs with short duplex. These findings unveil the molecular basis of ADAR1 editing and provide insights into its immune-regulatory functions and therapeutic potential.