TRMT2B is responsible for both tRNA and rRNA m5U-methylation in human mitochondria

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Abstract

RNA species play host to a plethora of post-transcriptional modifications which together make up the epitranscriptome. 5-methyluridine (m5U) is one of the most common modifications made to cellular RNA, where it is found almost ubiquitously in bacterial and eukaryotic cytosolic tRNAs at position 54. Here, we demonstrate that m5U54 in human mitochondrial tRNAs is catalysed by the nuclear-encoded enzyme TRMT2B, and that its repertoire of substrates is expanded to ribosomal RNAs, catalysing m5U429 in 12S rRNA. We show that TRMT2B is not essential for viability in human cells and that knocking-out the gene shows no obvious phenotype with regards to RNA stability, mitochondrial translation, or cellular growth.

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Powell, C. A., & Minczuk, M. (2020). TRMT2B is responsible for both tRNA and rRNA m5U-methylation in human mitochondria. RNA Biology, 17(4), 451–462. https://doi.org/10.1080/15476286.2020.1712544

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