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A Two-Layered Targeting Mechanism Underlies Nuclear RNA Sorting by the Human Exosome
Author(s) -
Guifen Wu,
Manfred Schmid,
Leonor Rib,
Patrik Polák,
Nicola Meola,
Albin Sandelin,
Torben Heick Jensen
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2020.01.068
Subject(s) - exosome , exosome complex , biology , polyadenylation , microbiology and biotechnology , gene isoform , rna , computational biology , proteostasis , genetics , non coding rna , gene , microrna , microvesicles
Degradation of transcripts in human nuclei is primarily facilitated by the RNA exosome. To obtain substrate specificity, the exosome is aided by adaptors; in the nucleoplasm, those adaptors are the nuclear exosome-targeting (NEXT) complex and the poly(A) (pA) exosome-targeting (PAXT) connection. How these adaptors guide exosome targeting remains enigmatic. Employing high-resolution 3' end sequencing, we demonstrate that NEXT substrates arise from heterogenous and predominantly pA - 3' ends often covering kilobase-wide genomic regions. In contrast, PAXT targets harbor well-defined pA + 3' ends defined by canonical pA site use. Irrespective of this clear division, NEXT and PAXT act redundantly in two ways: (1) regional redundancy, where the majority of exosome-targeted transcription units produce NEXT- and PAXT-sensitive RNA isoforms, and (2) isoform redundancy, where the PAXT connection ensures fail-safe decay of post-transcriptionally polyadenylated NEXT targets. In conjunction, this provides a two-layered targeting mechanism for efficient nuclear sorting of the human transcriptome.

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