RESA identifies mRNA-regulatory sequences at high resolution

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Abstract

Gene expression is extensively regulated at the levels of mRNA stability, localization and translation. However, decoding functional RNA-regulatory features remains a limitation to understanding post-transcriptional regulation in vivo. Here, we developed RNA-element selection assay (RESA), a method that selects RNA elements on the basis of their activity in vivo and uses high-throughput sequencing to provide a quantitative measurement of their regulatory functions at near-nucleotide resolution. We implemented RESA to identify sequence elements modulating mRNA stability during zebrafish embryogenesis. RESA provides a sensitive and quantitative measure of microRNA activity in vivo and also identifies novel regulatory sequences. To uncover specific sequence requirements within regulatory elements, we developed a bisulfite-mediated nucleotide-conversion strategy for large-scale mutational analysis (RESA-bisulfite). Finally, we used the versatile RESA platform to map candidate protein-RNA interactions in vivo (RESA-CLIP).

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Yartseva, V., Takacs, C. M., Vejnar, C. E., Lee, M. T., & Giraldez, A. J. (2017). RESA identifies mRNA-regulatory sequences at high resolution. Nature Methods, 14(2), 201–207. https://doi.org/10.1038/nmeth.4121

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