Extensive Recoding of the Neural Proteome in Cephalopods by RNA Editing.

IF 8.7 1区 农林科学 Q1 AGRICULTURE, DAIRY & ANIMAL SCIENCE
Joshua J C Rosenthal, Eli Eisenberg
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

The coleoid cephalopods have the largest brains, and display the most complex behaviors, of all invertebrates. The molecular and cellular mechanisms that underlie these remarkable advancements remain largely unexplored. Early molecular cloning studies of squid ion channel transcripts uncovered an unusually large number of A→I RNA editing sites that recoded codons. Further cloning of other neural transcripts showed a similar pattern. The advent of deep-sequencing technologies and the associated bioinformatics allowed the mapping of RNA editing events across the entire neural transcriptomes of various cephalopods. The results were remarkable: They contained orders of magnitude more recoding editing sites than any other taxon. Although RNA editing sites are abundant in most multicellular metazoans, they rarely recode. In cephalopods, the majority of neural transcripts are recoded. Recent studies have focused on whether these events are adaptive, as well as other noncanonical aspects of cephalopod RNA editing.

通过RNA编辑对头足类动物神经蛋白质组的广泛重新编码。
在所有无脊椎动物中,胶体头足类动物拥有最大的大脑,并表现出最复杂的行为。这些显著进步背后的分子和细胞机制在很大程度上仍未被探索。对鱿鱼离子通道转录本的早期分子克隆研究发现了异常大量的A→I RNA编辑位点,这些位点编码密码子。对其他神经转录物的进一步克隆也显示出类似的模式。深度测序技术和相关生物信息学的出现,使得在各种头足类动物的整个神经转录组中绘制RNA编辑事件的图谱成为可能。结果是显著的:它们包含的编码编辑位点比任何其他分类单元都要多出数量级。尽管RNA编辑位点在大多数多细胞后生动物中丰富,但它们很少重新编码。在头足类动物中,大多数神经转录本被重新编码。最近的研究集中在这些事件是否具有适应性,以及头足类动物RNA编辑的其他非规范方面。
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来源期刊
Annual Review of Animal Biosciences
Annual Review of Animal Biosciences BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY-ZOOLOGY
CiteScore
21.30
自引率
0.80%
发文量
31
期刊介绍: The Annual Review of Animal Biosciences is primarily dedicated to the fields of biotechnology, genetics, genomics, and breeding, with a special focus on veterinary medicine. This includes veterinary pathobiology, infectious diseases and vaccine development, and conservation and zoo biology. The publication aims to address the needs of scientists studying both wild and domesticated animal species, veterinarians, conservation biologists, and geneticists.
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