eLife (Dec 2024)

Full-length direct RNA sequencing uncovers stress granule-dependent RNA decay upon cellular stress

  • Showkat Ahmad Dar,
  • Sulochan Malla,
  • Vlastimil Martinek,
  • Matthew John Payea,
  • Christopher Tai-Yi Lee,
  • Jessica Martin,
  • Aditya Jignesh Khandeshi,
  • Jennifer L Martindale,
  • Cedric Belair,
  • Manolis Maragkakis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.96284
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

Read online

Cells react to stress by triggering response pathways, leading to extensive alterations in the transcriptome to restore cellular homeostasis. The role of RNA metabolism in shaping the cellular response to stress is vital, yet the global changes in RNA stability under these conditions remain unclear. In this work, we employ direct RNA sequencing with nanopores, enhanced by 5ʹ end adapter ligation, to comprehensively interrogate the human transcriptome at single-molecule and -nucleotide resolution. By developing a statistical framework to identify robust RNA length variations in nanopore data, we find that cellular stress induces prevalent 5ʹ end RNA decay that is coupled to translation and ribosome occupancy. Unlike typical RNA decay models in normal conditions, we show that stress-induced RNA decay is dependent on XRN1 but does not depend on deadenylation or decapping. We observed that RNAs undergoing decay are predominantly enriched in the stress granule transcriptome while inhibition of stress granule formation via genetic ablation of G3BP1 and G3BP2 rescues RNA length. Our findings reveal RNA decay as a key component of RNA metabolism upon cellular stress that is dependent on stress granule formation.

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