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The Many Roles of A-to-I RNA Editing in Animals: Functional or Adaptive?

Dongwu Zhan, Caiqing Zheng, Wanzhi Cai, Hu Li, Yuange Duan

2023Frontiers in Bioscience-Landmark16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Metazoan adenosine-to-inosine (A-to-I) RNA editing is a highly conserved mechanism that diversifies the transcriptome by post-transcriptionally converting adenosine to inosine. Millions of editing sites have been identified in different species and, based on abnormal editing observed in various disorders, it is intuitive to conclude that RNA editing is both functional and adaptive. In this review, we propose the following major points: (1) "Function/functional" only represents a molecular/phenotypic consequence and is not necessarily connected to "adaptation/adaptive"; (2) Adaptive editing should be judged in the light of evolution and emphasize advantages of temporal-spatial flexibility; (3) Adaptive editing could, in theory, be extended from nonsynonymous sites to all potentially functional sites. This review seeks to conceptually bridge the gap between molecular biology and evolutionary biology and provide a more objective understanding on the biological functions and evolutionary significance of RNA editing.

Topics & Concepts

RNA editingInosineAdaptation (eye)Computational biologyFlexibility (engineering)BiologyFunction (biology)RNATranscriptomeComputer scienceEvolutionary biologyAdenosineGeneticsGeneNeuroscienceGene expressionMathematicsStatisticsBiochemistryRNA regulation and diseaseCRISPR and Genetic Engineeringinterferon and immune responses
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