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RNA recoding in cephalopods tailors microtubule motor protein function

Kavita J. Rangan, Samara L. Reck‐Peterson

2023Cell40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

RNA editing is a widespread epigenetic process that can alter the amino acid sequence of proteins, termed "recoding." In cephalopods, most transcripts are recoded, and recoding is hypothesized to be an adaptive strategy to generate phenotypic plasticity. However, how animals use RNA recoding dynamically is largely unexplored. We investigated the function of cephalopod RNA recoding in the microtubule motor proteins kinesin and dynein. We found that squid rapidly employ RNA recoding in response to changes in ocean temperature, and kinesin variants generated in cold seawater displayed enhanced motile properties in single-molecule experiments conducted in the cold. We also identified tissue-specific recoded squid kinesin variants that displayed distinct motile properties. Finally, we showed that cephalopod recoding sites can guide the discovery of functional substitutions in non-cephalopod kinesin and dynein. Thus, RNA recoding is a dynamic mechanism that generates phenotypic plasticity in cephalopods and can inform the characterization of conserved non-cephalopod proteins.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyMicrotubuleFunction (biology)RNAMotor proteinGeneticsCell biologyEvolutionary biologyComputational biologyGeneRNA Research and SplicingRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsRNA Interference and Gene Delivery
RNA recoding in cephalopods tailors microtubule motor protein function | Litcius