4.8 Article

ADAR regulates APOL1 via A-to-I RNA editing by inhibition of MDA5 activation in a paradoxical biological circuit

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2210150119

Keywords

APOL1; kidney disease; RNA editing; ADAR; innate immunity

Funding

  1. Young Investigator Grant of the National Kidney Foundation
  2. NIH [R01MD007092, R01MD014726, RC2DK122397, R01DK119380, R01DK108805]
  3. Ellison Foundation
  4. Office of Rare Diseases Research
  5. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS)
  6. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
  7. NCATS [U54DK083912]
  8. NIDDK [U54DK083912]
  9. University of Michigan
  10. NephCure Kidney International
  11. Halpin Foundation
  12. RDCRN Data Management and Coordinating Center - NCATS
  13. NINDS [U2CTR002818]

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APOL1 risk variants are associated with increased risk of kidney disease in individuals of African ancestry. The expression of APOL1 gene is closely related to the degree of kidney cell injury. Regulation of APOL1 expression through ADAR-mediated editing may play a critical role in determining the penetrance of risk alleles. This study provides evidence that ADAR down-regulates APOL1 by preventing MDA5 recognition of dsRNA, and ADAR-mediated editing is an important regulator of APOL1 expression and may impact the severity of APOL1-associated kidney disease.
APOL1 risk variants are associated with increased risk of kidney disease in patients of African ancestry, but not all individuals with the APOL1 high-risk genotype develop kidney disease. As APOL1 gene expression correlates closely with the degree of kidney cell injury in both cell and animal models, the mechanisms regulating APOL1 expression may be critical determinants of risk allele penetrance. The APOL1 messenger RNA includes Alu elements at the 30 untranslated region that can form a doublestranded RNA structure (Alu-dsRNA) susceptible to posttranscriptional adenosine deaminase acting on RNA (ADAR)-mediated adenosine-to-inosine (A-to-I) editing, potentially impacting gene expression. We studied the effects of ADAR expression and A-to-I editing on APOL1 levels in podocytes, human kidney tissue, and a transgenic APOL1 mouse model. In interferon-. (IFN-.)-stimulated human podocytes, ADAR down-regulates APOL1 by preventing melanoma differentiation-associated protein 5 (MDA5) recognition of dsRNA and the subsequent type I interferon (IFN-I) response. Knockdown experiments showed that recognition of APOL1 messenger RNA itself is an important contributor to the MDA5-driven IFN-I response. Mathematical modeling suggests that the IFN-ADAR-APOL1 network functions as an incoherent feed-forward loop, a biological circuit capable of generating fast, transient responses to stimuli. Glomeruli from human kidney biopsies exhibited widespread editing of APOL1 Alu-dsRNA, while the transgenic mouse model closely replicated the edited sites in humans. APOL1 expression in mice was inversely correlated with Adar1 expression under IFN-. stimuli, supporting the idea that ADAR regulates APOL1 levels in vivo. ADAR-mediated A-to-I editing is an important regulator of APOL1 expression that could impact both penetrance and severity of APOL1associated kidney disease.

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