G-quadruplex structures trigger RNA phase separation

Yueying Zhang(John Innes Centre), Minglei Yang(John Innes Centre), Susan Duncan(John Innes Centre), Xiaofei Yang(John Innes Centre), Mahmoud A. S. Abdelhamid(University of East Anglia), Lin Huang(University of Dundee), Huakun Zhang(John Innes Centre), Philip N. Benfey(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Zoë A. E. Waller(University of East Anglia), Yiliang Ding(John Innes Centre)
Nucleic Acids Research
October 17, 2019
Cited by 155Open Access
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Abstract

Liquid-liquid phase separation plays an important role in a variety of cellular processes, including the formation of membrane-less organelles, the cytoskeleton, signalling complexes, and many other biological supramolecular assemblies. Studies on the molecular basis of phase separation in cells have focused on protein-driven phase separation. In contrast, there is limited understanding on how RNA specifically contributes to phase separation. Here, we described a phase-separation-like phenomenon that SHORT ROOT (SHR) RNA undergoes in cells. We found that an RNA G-quadruplex (GQ) forms in SHR mRNA and is capable of triggering RNA phase separation under physiological conditions, suggesting that GQs might be responsible for the formation of the SHR phase-separation-like phenomenon in vivo. We also found the extent of GQ-triggered-phase-separation increases on exposure to conditions which promote GQ. Furthermore, GQs with more G-quartets and longer loops are more likely to form phase separation. Our studies provide the first evidence that RNA can adopt structural motifs to trigger and/or maintain the specificity of RNA-driven phase separation.


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