Abstract
Different subsets of the tRNA pool in human cells are expressed in different cellular conditions. The ‘proliferation-tRNAs’ are induced upon normal and cancerous cell division, while the ‘differentiation-tRNAs’ are active in non-dividing, differentiated cells. Here we examine the essentiality of the various tRNAs upon cellular growth and arrest. We established a CRISPR-based editing procedure with sgRNAs that each target a tRNA family. We measured tRNA essentiality for cellular growth and found that most proliferation-tRNAs are essential compared to differentiation-tRNAs in rapidly growing cell lines. Yet in more slowly dividing lines, the differentiation-tRNAs were more essential. In addition, we measured the essentiality of each tRNA family upon response to cell cycle arresting signals. Here we detected a more complex behavior with both proliferation-tRNAs and differentiation tRNAs showing various levels of essentiality. These results provide the so-far most comprehensive functional characterization of human tRNAs with intricate roles in various cellular states.
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CITATION STYLE
Aharon-Hefetz, N., Frumkin, I., Mayshar, Y., Dahan, O., Pilpel, Y., & Rak, R. (2020). Manipulation of the human trna pool reveals distinct trna sets that act in cellular proliferation or cell cycle arrest. ELife, 9, 1–28. https://doi.org/10.7554/ELIFE.58461
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