Comprehensive Identification of RNA-Binding Domains in Human Cells

Alfredo Castelló(University of Oxford), Bernd Fischer(European Molecular Biology Organization), Christian K. Frese(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Rastislav Horos(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Anne-Marie Alleaume(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Sophia Föehr(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Tomaž Curk(University of Ljubljana), Jeroen Krijgsveld(European Molecular Biology Organization), Matthias W. Hentze(European Molecular Biology Organization)
Molecular Cell
July 21, 2016
Cited by 674Open Access
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Abstract

Mammalian cells harbor more than a thousand RNA-binding proteins (RBPs), with half of these employing unknown modes of RNA binding. We developed RBDmap to determine the RNA-binding sites of native RBPs on a proteome-wide scale. We identified 1,174 binding sites within 529 HeLa cell RBPs, discovering numerous RNA-binding domains (RBDs). Catalytic centers or protein-protein interaction domains are in close relationship with RNA-binding sites, invoking possible effector roles of RNA in the control of protein function. Nearly half of the RNA-binding sites map to intrinsically disordered regions, uncovering unstructured domains as prevalent partners in protein-RNA interactions. RNA-binding sites represent hot spots for defined posttranslational modifications such as lysine acetylation and tyrosine phosphorylation, suggesting metabolic and signal-dependent regulation of RBP function. RBDs display a high degree of evolutionary conservation and incidence of Mendelian mutations, suggestive of important functional roles. RBDmap thus yields profound insights into native protein-RNA interactions in living cells.


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