Widespread generation of alternative UTRs contributes to sex-specific RNA binding by UNR

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Abstract

Upstream of N-ras (UNR) is a conserved RNA-binding protein that regulates mRNA translation and stability by binding to sites generally located in untranslated regions (UTRs). In Drosophila, sex-specific binding of UNR to msl2 mRNA and the noncoding RNA roX is believed to play key roles in the control of X-chromosome dosage compensation in both sexes. To investigate broader sex-specific functions of UNR, we have identified its RNA targets in adult male and female flies by high-throughput RNA binding and transcriptome analysis. Here we show that UNR binds to a large set of protein-coding transcripts and to a smaller set of noncoding RNAs in a sex-specific fashion. The analyses also reveal a strong correlation between sex-specific binding of UNR and sex-specific differential expression of UTRs in target genes. Validation experiments indicate that UNR indeed recognizes sex-specifically processed transcripts. These results suggest that UNR exploits the transcript diversity generated by alternative processing and alternative promoter usage to bind and regulate target genes in a sex-specific manner. Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. Copyright © 2012 RNA Society.

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Mihailovich, M., Wurth, L., Zambelli, F., Abaza, I., Militti, C., Mancuso, F. M., … Gebauer, F. (2012). Widespread generation of alternative UTRs contributes to sex-specific RNA binding by UNR. RNA, 18(1), 53–64. https://doi.org/10.1261/rna.029603.111

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