Combinatorial recognition of clustered RNA elements by the multidomain RNA-binding protein IMP3

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Abstract

How multidomain RNA-binding proteins recognize their specific target sequences, based on a combinatorial code, represents a fundamental unsolved question and has not been studied systematically so far. Here we focus on a prototypical multidomain RNA-binding protein, IMP3 (also called IGF2BP3), which contains six RNA-binding domains (RBDs): four KH and two RRM domains. We establish an integrative systematic strategy, combining single-domain-resolved SELEX-seq, motif-spacing analyses, in vivo iCLIP, functional validation assays, and structural biology. This approach identifies the RNA-binding specificity and RNP topology of IMP3, involving all six RBDs and a cluster of up to five distinct and appropriately spaced CA-rich and GGC-core RNA elements, covering a >100 nucleotide-long target RNA region. Our generally applicable approach explains both specificity and flexibility of IMP3-RNA recognition, allows the prediction of IMP3 targets, and provides a paradigm for the function of multivalent interactions with multidomain RNA-binding proteins in gene regulation.

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Schneider, T., Hung, L. H., Aziz, M., Wilmen, A., Thaum, S., Wagner, J., … Bindereif, A. (2019). Combinatorial recognition of clustered RNA elements by the multidomain RNA-binding protein IMP3. Nature Communications, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-09769-8

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