Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/31142
Title: m5U54 tRNA hypomodification by lack of TRMT2A drives the generation of tRNA-derived small RNAs
Author: Pereira, Marisa
Ribeiro, Diana R.
Pinheiro, Miguel M.
Ferreira, Margarida
Kellner, Stefanie
Soares, Ana R.
Keywords: tRNAs
tRNA-modifying enzyme
TRMT2A
Methyltransferase
tRNA hypomethylation
tRNA-derived small RNAs
tRNA-derived stress-induced RNAs
Angiogenin
Issue Date: Mar-2021
Publisher: MDPI
Abstract: Transfer RNA (tRNA) molecules contain various post-transcriptional modifications that are crucial for tRNA stability, translation efficiency, and fidelity. Besides their canonical roles in translation, tRNAs also originate tRNA-derived small RNAs (tsRNAs), a class of small non-coding RNAs with regulatory functions ranging from translation regulation to gene expression control and cellular stress response. Recent evidence indicates that tsRNAs are also modified, however, the impact of tRNA epitranscriptome deregulation on tsRNAs generation is only now beginning to be uncovered. The 5-methyluridine (m5U) modification at position 54 of cytosolic tRNAs is one of the most common and conserved tRNA modifications among species. The tRNA methyltransferase TRMT2A catalyzes this modification, but its biological role remains mostly unexplored. Here, we show that TRMT2A knockdown in human cells induces m5U54 tRNA hypomodification and tsRNA formation. More specifically, m5U54 hypomodification is followed by overexpression of the ribonuclease angiogenin (ANG) that cleaves tRNAs near the anticodon, resulting in accumulation of 5′tRNA-derived stress-induced RNAs (5′tiRNAs), namely 5′tiRNA-GlyGCC and 5′tiRNA-GluCTC, among others. Additionally, transcriptomic analysis confirms that down-regulation of TRMT2A and consequently m5U54 hypomodification impacts the cellular stress response and RNA stability, which is often correlated with tiRNA generation. Accordingly, exposure to oxidative stress conditions induces TRMT2A down-regulation and tiRNA formation in mammalian cells. These results establish a link between tRNA hypomethylation and ANG-dependent tsRNAs formation and unravel m5U54 as a tRNA cleavage protective mark.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/31142
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22062941
ISSN: 1661-6596
Appears in Collections:IBIMED - Artigos
DCM - Artigos

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