Mechanism of noncoding RNA associated N6-Methyladenosine recognition by an RNA processing complex during IgH DNA recombination

Published: 12 July 2021| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/y4cpkdz77d.1
Contributors:
Uttiya Basu,
,

Description

Immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) locus-associated G-rich long noncoding RNA (SµGLT) is important for physiological and pathological B cell DNA recombination. We demonstrate that the METTL3 enzyme-catalyzed N6-methyladenosine (m6A) RNA modification drives recognition and 3’-end processing of SµGLT by the RNA exosome, promoting class switch recombination (CSR) and suppressing chromosomal translocations. The recognition is driven by interaction of the MPP6 adaptor protein with nuclear m6A reader YTHDC1. MPP6 and YTHDC1 promote CSR by recruiting AID and the RNA exosome to actively transcribing SµGLT. Direct suppression of m6A modification of SµGLT or of m6A reader YTHDC1 reduces CSR. Moreover, METTL3, an essential gene for B cell development in the bone marrow and germinal center, suppresses IgH-associated aberrant DNA breaks and prevents genomic instability. Taken together, we propose coordinated and central roles for MPP6, m6A modification, and m6A reader proteins in controlling long noncoding RNA processing, DNA recombination and development in B cells.

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Please refer to manuscript, Nair et al, Molecular Cell 2021 (Mechanism of noncoding RNA associated N6-Methyladenosine recognition by an RNA processing complex during IgH DNA recombination). STAR methods describes all the relevant protocols.

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Columbia University

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