Cell Reports
Volume 31, Issue 7, 19 May 2020, 107654
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Article
Zinc Finger RNA-Binding Protein Zn72D Regulates ADAR-Mediated RNA Editing in Neurons

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2020.107654Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Drosophila Zn72D is a broadly influential regulator of neuronal A-to-I RNA editing

  • Zn72D regulates ADAR protein levels and editing levels at hundreds of editing sites

  • Loss of Zn72D causes morphological defects at the neuromuscular junction

  • Zn72D regulation of editing is conserved in mammalian neurons

Summary

Adenosine-to-inosine RNA editing, catalyzed by adenosine deaminase acting on RNA (ADAR) enzymes, alters RNA sequences from those encoded by DNA. These editing events are dynamically regulated, but few trans regulators of ADARs are known in vivo. Here, we screen RNA-binding proteins for roles in editing regulation with knockdown experiments in the Drosophila brain. We identify zinc-finger protein at 72D (Zn72D) as a regulator of editing levels at a majority of editing sites in the brain. Zn72D both regulates ADAR protein levels and interacts with ADAR in an RNA-dependent fashion, and similar to ADAR, Zn72D is necessary to maintain proper neuromuscular junction architecture and fly mobility. Furthermore, Zn72D’s regulatory role in RNA editing is conserved because the mammalian homolog of Zn72D, Zfr, regulates editing in mouse primary neurons. The broad and conserved regulation of ADAR editing by Zn72D in neurons sustains critically important editing events.

Keywords

A-to-I RNA editing
Adar
Zn72D
neuromuscular junction

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