In vivo single-molecule analysis reveals COOLAIR RNA structural diversity

Minglei Yang(John Innes Centre), Pan Zhu(John Innes Centre), Jitender Cheema(John Innes Centre), Rebecca Bloomer(John Innes Centre), Paweł Mikulski(John Innes Centre), Qi Liu(John Innes Centre), Yueying Zhang(John Innes Centre), Caroline Dean(John Innes Centre), Yiliang Ding(John Innes Centre)
Nature
August 17, 2022
Cited by 123Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Cellular RNAs are heterogeneous with respect to their alternative processing and secondary structures, but the functional importance of this complexity is still poorly understood. A set of alternatively processed antisense non-coding transcripts, which are collectively called COOLAIR , are generated at the Arabidopsis floral-repressor locus FLOWERING LOCUS C ( FLC ) 1 . Different isoforms of COOLAIR influence FLC transcriptional output in warm and cold conditions 2–7 . Here, to further investigate the function of COOLAIR , we developed an RNA structure-profiling method to determine the in vivo structure of single RNA molecules rather than the RNA population average. This revealed that individual isoforms of the COOLAIR transcript adopt multiple structures with different conformational dynamics. The major distally polyadenylated COOLAIR isoform in warm conditions adopts three predominant structural conformations, the proportions and conformations of which change after cold exposure. An alternatively spliced, strongly cold-upregulated distal COOLAIR isoform 6 shows high structural diversity, in contrast to proximally polyadenylated COOLAIR . A hyper-variable COOLAIR structural element was identified that was complementary to the FLC transcription start site. Mutations altering the structure of this region changed FLC expression and flowering time, consistent with an important regulatory role of the COOLAIR structure in FLC transcription. Our work demonstrates that isoforms of non-coding RNA transcripts adopt multiple distinct and functionally relevant structural conformations, which change in abundance and shape in response to external conditions.


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