Cells (Aug 2020)

<i>Arabidopsis thaliana cbp80</i>, <i>c2h2</i>, and <i>flk</i> Knockout Mutants Accumulate Increased Amounts of Circular RNAs

  • Anna Philips,
  • Katarzyna Nowis,
  • Michal Stelmaszczuk,
  • Jan Podkowiński,
  • Luiza Handschuh,
  • Paulina Jackowiak,
  • Marek Figlerowicz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells9091937
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 9
p. 1937

Abstract

Read online

Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are the products of the non-canonical splicing of pre-mRNAs. In contrast to humans and animals, our knowledge of the biogenesis and function of circRNAs in plants is very scarce. To identify proteins involved in plant circRNA generation, we characterized the transcriptomes of 18 Arabidopsis thaliana knockout mutants for genes related to splicing. The vast majority (>90%) of circRNAs were formed in more than one variant; only a small fraction of circRNAs was mutant-specific. Five times more circRNA types were identified in cbp80 and three times more in c2h2 mutants than in the wild-type. We also discovered that in cbp80, c2h2 and flk mutants, the accumulation of circRNAs was significantly increased. The increased accumulation of circular transcripts was not accompanied by corresponding changes in the accumulation of linear transcripts. Our results indicate that one of the roles of CBP80, C2H2 and FLK in splicing is to ensure the proper order of the exons. In the absence of one of the above-mentioned factors, the process might be altered, leading to the production of circular transcripts. This suggests that the transition toward circRNA production can be triggered by factors sequestering these proteins. Consequently, the expression of linear transcripts might be regulated through circRNA production.

Keywords