1. Mettl3-catalyzed m 6 A regulates histone modifier and modification expression in self-renewing somatic tissue.
- Author
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Maldonado López AM, Ko EK, Huang S, Pacella G, Kuprasertkul N, D'souza CA, Reyes Hueros RA, Shen H, Stoute J, Elashal H, Sinkfield M, Anderson A, Prouty S, Li HB, Seykora JT, Liu KF, and Capell BC
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Adenosine, Cell Adhesion, RNA, Messenger, Catalysis, Histones, Methyltransferases genetics
- Abstract
N6 -methyladenosine (m
6 A) is the most abundant modification on messenger RNAs (mRNAs) and is catalyzed by methyltransferase-like protein 3 (Mettl3). To understand the role of m6 A in a self-renewing somatic tissue, we deleted Mettl3 in epidermal progenitors in vivo. Mice lacking Mettl3 demonstrate marked features of dysfunctional development and self-renewal, including a loss of hair follicle morphogenesis and impaired cell adhesion and polarity associated with oral ulcerations. We show that Mettl3 promotes the m6 A-mediated degradation of mRNAs encoding critical histone modifying enzymes. Depletion of Mettl3 results in the loss of m6 A on these mRNAs and increases their expression and associated modifications, resulting in widespread gene expression abnormalities that mirror the gross phenotypic abnormalities. Collectively, these results have identified an additional layer of gene regulation within epithelial tissues, revealing an essential role for m6 A in the regulation of chromatin modifiers, and underscoring a critical role for Mettl3-catalyzed m6 A in proper epithelial development and self-renewal.- Published
- 2023
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