The extensive m5C epitranscriptome of Thermococcus kodakarensis is generated by a suite of RNA methyltransferases that support thermophily

RNAs are often modified to invoke new activities. While many modifications are limited in frequency, restricted to non-coding RNAs, or present only in select organisms, 5-methylcytidine (m 5 C) is abundant across diverse RNAs and fitness-relevant across Domains of life, but the synthesis and impacts...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-08, Vol.15 (1), p.7272-20, Article 7272
Hauptverfasser: Fluke, Kristin A., Fuchs, Ryan T., Tsai, Yueh-Lin, Talbott, Victoria, Elkins, Liam, Febvre, Hallie P., Dai, Nan, Wolf, Eric J., Burkhart, Brett W., Schiltz, Jackson, Brett Robb, G., Corrêa, Ivan R., Santangelo, Thomas J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:RNAs are often modified to invoke new activities. While many modifications are limited in frequency, restricted to non-coding RNAs, or present only in select organisms, 5-methylcytidine (m 5 C) is abundant across diverse RNAs and fitness-relevant across Domains of life, but the synthesis and impacts of m 5 C have yet to be fully investigated. Here, we map m 5 C in the model hyperthermophile, Thermococcus kodakarensis . We demonstrate that m 5 C is ~25x more abundant in T. kodakarensis than human cells, and the m 5 C epitranscriptome includes ~10% of unique transcripts. T. kodakarensis rRNAs harbor tenfold more m 5 C compared to Eukarya or Bacteria. We identify at least five RNA m 5 C methyltransferases (R5CMTs), and strains deleted for individual R5CMTs lack site-specific m 5 C modifications that limit hyperthermophilic growth. We show that m 5 C is likely generated through partial redundancy in target sites among R5CMTs. The complexity of the m 5 C epitranscriptome in T. kodakarensis argues that m 5 C supports life in the extremes. The epitranscriptome is fitness-relevant across Domains. Here, the authors map m 5 C in the model hyperthermophile, Thermococcus kodakarensis . The abundance and complexity of the m 5 C epitranscriptome in T. kodakarensis argues that m 5 C supports life in the extremes.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-51410-w