PLoS Biology (Jul 2022)

Alternative splicing of METTL3 explains apparently METTL3-independent m6A modifications in mRNA

  • Hui Xian Poh,
  • Aashiq H. Mirza,
  • Brian F. Pickering,
  • Samie R. Jaffrey

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 7

Abstract

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N6-methyladenosine (m6A) is a highly prevalent mRNA modification that promotes degradation of transcripts encoding proteins that have roles in cell development, differentiation, and other pathways. METTL3 is the major methyltransferase that catalyzes the formation of m6A in mRNA. As 30% to 80% of m6A can remain in mRNA after METTL3 depletion by CRISPR/Cas9-based methods, other enzymes are thought to catalyze a sizable fraction of m6A. Here, we reexamined the source of m6A in the mRNA transcriptome. We characterized mouse embryonic stem cell lines that continue to have m6A in their mRNA after Mettl3 knockout. We show that these cells express alternatively spliced Mettl3 transcript isoforms that bypass the CRISPR/Cas9 mutations and produce functionally active methyltransferases. We similarly show that other reported METTL3 knockout cell lines express altered METTL3 proteins. We find that gene dependency datasets show that most cell lines fail to proliferate after METTL3 deletion, suggesting that reported METTL3 knockout cell lines express altered METTL3 proteins rather than have full knockout. Finally, we reassessed METTL3’s role in synthesizing m6A using an exon 4 deletion of Mettl3 and found that METTL3 is responsible for >95% of m6A in mRNA. Overall, these studies suggest that METTL3 is responsible for the vast majority of m6A in the transcriptome, and that remaining m6A in putative METTL3 knockout cell lines is due to the expression of altered but functional METTL3 isoforms. The modification m6A remains in mRNA after METTL3 depletion, suggesting that other m6A methyltransferases exist. This study investigates METTL3 knockouts, finding that they often escape knockout by expressing functional METTL3 hypomorphs, and demonstrating that METTL3 is indeed responsible for most m6A in mRNA.