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RNA Editing Process Plays Essential
Role in Embryo Development
(PHILADELPHIA - Nov. 30, 2000) In a new study, scientists at The
Wistar Institute report the first direct evidence that RNA editing
is essential to mammalian embryo development. RNA editing is a normal
but not yet fully understood process in which small nucleotide changes
occur after DNA has been transcribed into RNA. The process makes
it possible for one gene to be translated into multiple proteins
with different structures or functions.
The researchers repeatedly attempted to delete, or knock out, in
mice a gene known to be involved in RNA editing called ADAR1 in
order to study its function. Certain target genes in the brain are
known to be subjected to RNA editing by the ADAR1 enzyme, including
glutamate receptor ion channels, critical for memory formation,
and serotonin receptors, which regulate emotional behaviors. The
investigators expected that deletion of the ADAR1 gene would therefore
lead to significant changes in brain functions.
Unexpectedly, however, they found that the knockout mouse embryos
died midterm due to an inability to make mature red blood cells.
At the least, the results suggest that ADAR1 and RNA editing are
critical to the development of mature red blood cells, an essential
step in mammalian embryo development. The new findings were published
in the December 1 issue of Science.
"The inability of mice with a defective RNA editing system to make
mature red blood cells is likely just the tip of the iceberg," says
Wistar professor Kazuko Nishikura, Ph.D., senior author on the study.
"The ADAR1 gene is expressed in many tissues throughout the body
in addition to the brain and is probably involved in the RNA editing
of a number of target genes that have not yet been identified."
As scientists prepare to enter the post-genomic era, the role of
RNA editing in determining protein structure and function may become
an increasingly important consideration in genetic research. Investigations
such as Nishikuraıs indicate that RNA editing is fundamental to
key biological processes and point to the complexity of predicting
protein structures and functions from gene sequences alone.
Before the discovery of RNA editing in mammals in the 1990s, it
was believed that the path from DNA to protein was fairly straightforward:
DNA in a cellıs nucleus is transcribed to RNA, and then sometimes
shortened to splice out noncoding sections to form mature messenger
RNA. The mature messenger RNA is transported to the cellıs cytoplasm,
where translation to protein occurs.
But researchers learned that mammalian protein production can be
more complicated; some RNA is edited prior to translation. Single
or multiple nucleotides may change before the mature messenger RNA
moves into the cytoplasm, leading ultimately to the production of
a protein that does not fully reflect the original genetic instructions
in the DNA. RNA editing is, in a sense, an economical system, enabling
one gene to produce a number of proteins with different structures
or functions. Scientists believe that the known target genes represent
only a fraction of those that are subjected to RNA editing.
Nishikura and her co-investigators aimed to produce a mouse line
lacking the gene ADAR1, which is part of a small gene family that
produces enzymes involved in the RNA editing of a number of target
genes. Midway through development, however, the mouse embryos lacking
the ADAR1 gene died, which surprised the researchers; often, gene
knockout mice are born alive because the mother supplies necessary
biological functions to its embryos. Further study revealed that
the embryos died due to an inability to produce mature red blood
cells.
"We believe that when the ADAR1 gene is knocked out, the reduced
or lost capacity to edit messenger RNA causes this defect in red
blood cell production," Nishikura says. "Our next goal is to identify
the target gene or genes that must be edited by the ADAR1 enzyme
in order for red blood cell production to occur, as well as other
target genes for RNA editing by this enzyme."
She adds that the ADAR1 gene knockout study will likely lead to
new research aimed at discovering the mechanism for making normal
red blood cells in mammalian embryos.
The study builds on earlier work by Nishikuraıs research team,
which was the first group to clone the ADAR1 gene in 1994.
The lead author on the study is Qingde Wang, M.D., Ph.D. The other
co-authors are Jaspal Khillan, Ph.D., and Paul Gadue, B.S. Funding
for the work came from the National Institutes of Health, the Human
Frontier Program Organization, and the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.
The Wistar Institute is an independent nonprofit
biomedical research institution dedicated to discovering the basic
mechanisms underlying major diseases, including cancer and AIDS,
and to developing fundamentally new strategies to prevent or treat
them. The Institute is a National Cancer Institute-designated Cancer
Center < one of the nationıs first, funded continuously since 1968,
and one of only 10 focused on basic research. Founded in 1892, Wistar
was the first institution of its kind devoted to medical research
and training in the nation. News releases from The Wistar Institute
are available to reporters by direct e-mail or fax upon request.
They are also posted electronically to Wistarıs home page (http://www.wistar.upenn.edu),
to EurekAlert! (http://www.eurekalert.org), an Internet resource
sponsored by the American Association for the Advancement of Science,
and to the public interest newswire AScribe (http://www.ascribe.org).
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