4.8 Article

Profiling dynamic RNA-protein interactions using small-molecule-induced RNA editing

Journal

NATURE CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41589-023-01372-9

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In this study, the researchers developed TRIBE-ID, a strategy for quantifying RNA-protein interactions, and used it to study the interactions of G3BP1 and YBX1 under normal and oxidative stress conditions. They found that stress granule formation strengthened existing interactions and induced new RNA-protein binding events. Additionally, they discovered that G3BP1 stabilizes its targets independently of stress granule formation. This work provides a general approach for studying dynamic RNA-protein interactions in cellular contexts.
RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) play an important role in biology, and characterizing dynamic RNA-protein interactions is essential for understanding RBP function. In this study, we developed targets of RBPs identified by editing induced through dimerization (TRIBE-ID), a facile strategy for quantifying state-specific RNA-protein interactions upon rapamycin-mediated chemically induced dimerization and RNA editing. We performed TRIBE-ID with G3BP1 and YBX1 to study RNA-protein interactions during normal conditions and upon oxidative stress-induced biomolecular condensate formation. We quantified editing kinetics to infer interaction persistence and show that stress granule formation strengthens pre-existing RNA-protein interactions and induces new RNA-protein binding events. Furthermore, we demonstrate that G3BP1 stabilizes its targets under normal and oxidative stress conditions independent of stress granule formation. Finally, we apply our method to characterize small-molecule modulators of G3BP1-RNA binding. Taken together, our work provides a general approach to profile dynamic RNA-protein interactions in cellular contexts with temporal control.

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