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In Your Genome, It’s Not A Small World After All

Biology Wednesday, January 5, 2005 . This is a SciScoop post by Ricky James

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A greater understanding of RNA editing, scientists believe, might potentially shed light on evolutionary processes and might lead to new strategies for combatting some diseases. In fact, says Maas, scientists have learned that a type of RNA editing called A-to-I editing, which leads to changes in protein structure and function and in gene regulation, regulates crucial functions of neurotransmitter receptors in the brains of mammals.

Disturbances in A-to-I RNA editing have been implicated in several human diseases, such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig’s Disease), epilepsy and depression. Maas’s group has analyzed brain tumor tissues and tissues from a healthy brain.

“RNA editing, because of its effect on the ion channel, is very important for normal brain function,” says Maas. “We have found an impairment to RNA editing in malignant brain-tumor tissue. This suggests that epileptic seizures in patients with brain tumors could be caused by an editing deficiency with regard to the channel molecule.”

Maas’s research group recently discovered that A-to-I editing, in which adenosine is converted to inosine, is widespread among human genes and occurs frequently in a common genetic sequence known as the Alu repeat.

In December, an article written by Maas and his collaborator, Alekos Athanasiadis of M.I.T., titled “Widespread A-to-I RNA Editing of Alu-Containing mRNAs in the Human Transcriptome,” was published by the journal PloS Biology (plosbiology.org).

The article culminated two years of study, which began while Maas was at M.I.T., where he worked as a research scientist before joining the Lehigh faculty in 2003.

Maas’s group began their study by looking systematically on the genomic scale for genes that might be subject to A-to-I editing.

“One of the major puzzles in the field of RNA editing at that time,” he says, “was that only a few genes affected by RNA editing, perhaps two dozen, had been found, all in the brain. Most of them were discovered by serendipity. There was strong evidence that there should be many more affected genes, as many as several thousand, or about 10 percent of all human genes.”

To find genes affected by RNA editing, Maas and his colleagues used experimental analysis and computational methods, poring through the databases where sequences of new genes had been deposited.

“We used computational sequence analysis to look for the smoking gun of A-to-I editing in these sequences,” says Maas. “We looked for any sign that the sequences might be subject to editing.

“The sequence and frequency of the Alu element in the human genome are a major factor in why genes undergo RNA editing,” says Maas. “If you look at any gene sequence, you find more than one Alu element in the gene, and usually about a dozen.”

Scientists estimate that of 100,000 types of RNA molecules so far analyzed computationally, 1,400 are strong candidates for RNA editing. Maas’s group has validated about 50 of these in molecular biological experiments and has concluded that most are indeed affected by RNA editing. The group has also characterized why certain Alu elements are edited and where on the gene sequence the editing is occurring.

For the future, says Maas, “We hope to refine the computational search to be able to identify additional candidate sequences for editing with high certainty. We want to make more precise predictions regarding how a sequence subject to editing should look.

“In addition, we want to find out what the consequences of this massive editing are for gene function.”

Text for this article comes from a Lehigh press release.

2 Responses to In Your Genome, It’s Not A Small World After All

Anonymous

January 6th, 2005 at 4:45 pm

When one does not wish to have umpteen numbers of basic units to recombine, the best strategy is to take some very generic primaries, recombine them into larger numbers of more complicated units, recombine these at still higher levels, and so on. This is the feed-forward part of the system. It suffers from combinatorial explosion unless kept in check.

The second part of the system is to have some sort of selectional mechanism which weeds out unwanted or contextually inappropriate mid-level units in the hierarchical scheme. Such selection "optimizes" the overall plan.

But there can also be mixed intermediate strategies, such as the system "reaching back" into itself and altering the mid-level units before they are combined (multiplied if transcription/translation steps included for before/after effects). And there is also the possibility of "reaching forward", so that a population of units can itself, democratically or otherwise depending on abilities, shift the selectional and other steps.

Genomes and human languages appear to make use of all these strategies, so perhaps they are part of some high order universal information system management scheme.

codemaniac

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Anonymous

January 7th, 2005 at 5:21 pm

…maybe we’re simply part of a planet-sized computer that determines the ultimate question regarding life, the universe and everything.

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