Deconvolution of seed and RNA-binding protein crosstalk in RNAi-based functional genomics
Author(s)
Spengler, Ryan M.; Grigelioniene, Giedre; Kobayashi, Tatsuya; Suzuki, Hiroshi; Sharp, Phillip A.
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RNA interference (RNAi) is a major, powerful platform for gene perturbations, but is restricted by off-target mechanisms. Communication between RNAs, small RNAs, and RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) is a pervasive feature of cellular RNA networks. We present a crosstalk scenario, designated as crosstalk with endogenous RBPs' (ceRBP), in which small interfering RNAs or microRNAs with seed sequences that overlap RBP motifs have extended biological effects by perturbing endogenous RBP activity. Systematic analysis of small interfering RNA (siRNA) off-target data and genome-wide RNAi cancer lethality screens using 501 human cancer cell lines, a cancer dependency map, identified that seed-to-RBP crosstalk is widespread, contributes to off-target activity, and affects RNAi performance. Specifically, deconvolution of the interactions between gene knockdown and seed-mediated silencing effects in the cancer dependency map showed widespread contributions of seed-to-RBP crosstalk to growth-phenotype modulation. These findings suggest a novel aspect of microRNA biology and offer a basis for improvement of RNAi agents and RNAi-based functional genomics.
Date issued
2018-04Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology; Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MITJournal
Nature Genetics
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Suzuki, Hiroshi I. et al. “Deconvolution of Seed and RNA-Binding Protein Crosstalk in RNAi-Based Functional Genomics.” Nature Genetics 50, 5 (April 2018): 657–661 © 2018 The Author(s)
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
1061-4036
1546-1718