Fundamental Research (Jan 2022)

An ultra low-input method for global RNA structure probing uncovers Regnase-1-mediated regulation in macrophages

  • Meiling Piao,
  • Pan Li,
  • Xiaomin Zeng,
  • Xi-Wen Wang,
  • Lan Kang,
  • Jinsong Zhang,
  • Yifan Wei,
  • Shaojun Zhang,
  • Lei Tang,
  • Jianghui Zhu,
  • Chun Kit Kwok,
  • Xiaoyu Hu,
  • Qiangfeng Cliff Zhang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 2 – 13

Abstract

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To enable diverse functions and precise regulation, an RNA sequence often folds into complex yet distinct structures in different cellular states. Probing RNA in its native environment is essential to uncovering RNA structures of biological contexts. However, current methods generally require large amounts of input RNA and are challenging for physiologically relevant use. Here, we report smartSHAPE, a new RNA structure probing method that requires very low amounts of RNA input due to the largely reduced artefact of probing signals and increased efficiency of library construction. Using smartSHAPE, we showcased the profiling of the RNA structure landscape of mouse intestinal macrophages upon inflammation, and provided evidence that RNA conformational changes regulate immune responses. These results demonstrate that smartSHAPE can greatly expand the scope of RNA structure-based investigations in practical biological systems, and also provide a research paradigm for the study of post-transcriptional regulation.

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