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On the origin and evolution of RNA editing in metazoans

Authors :
Pei Zhang
Hao Yu
Yi-Hsien Su
Meritxell Antó Subirats
Lydia Garcia
Ji Li
Michael D. Martin
M. Thomas P. Gilbert
Xiaoyu Zhan
Mark Q. Martindale
Iñaki Ruiz-Trillo
Nina Lundholm
Qiye Li
Yuanzhen Zhu
Huishuang Tan
Guojie Zhang
Qunfei Guo
Jr-Kai Yu
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Extensive adenosine-to-inosine (A-to-I) editing of nuclear-transcribed RNAs is the hallmark of metazoan transcriptional regulation, and is fundamental to numerous biochemical processes. Here we explore the origin and evolution of this regulatory innovation, by quantifying its prevalence in 22 species that represent all major transitions in metazoan evolution. We provide substantial evidence that extensive RNA editing emerged in the common ancestor of extant metazoans. We find the frequency of RNA editing varies across taxa in a manner independent of metazoan complexity. Nevertheless, cis-acting features that guide A-to-I editing are under strong constraint across all metazoans. RNA editing seems to preserve an ancient mechanism for suppressing the more recently evolved repetitive elements, and is generally nonadaptive in protein-coding regions across metazoans, except forDrosophilaand cephalopods. Interestingly, RNA editing preferentially target genes involved in neurotransmission, cellular communication and cytoskeleton, and recodes identical amino acid positions in several conserved genes across diverse taxa, emphasizing broad roles of RNA editing in cellular functions during metazoan evolution that have been previously underappreciated.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c4630aa072ea7fadaac82a9bb6fbdd7d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.01.19.911685