4.4 Article

Evidence for auto-inhibition by the N terminus of hADAR2 and activation by dsRNA binding

Journal

RNA
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages 1563-1571

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1261/rna.7920904

Keywords

ADAR; deamination; RNA editing; dsRBM; inosine

Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM44073, R01 GM044073-15, R01 GM044073] Funding Source: Medline

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Adenosine deaminases that act on RNA(.)(ADARs) catalyze adenosine to inosine conversion in RNA that is largely double stranded. Human ADAR2 (hADAR2) contains two double-stranded RNA binding motifs (dsRBMs), separated by a 90-amino acid linker, and these are followed by the C-terminal catalytic domain. We assayed enzymatic activity of N-terminal deletion constructs of hADAR2 to determine the role of the dsRBMs and the intervening linker peptide. We found that a truncated protein consisting of one dsRBMs and the deaminase domain was capable of deaminating a short 15-bp substrate. In contrast, full-length hADAR2 was inactive on this short substrate. In addition, we observed that the N terminus, which was deleted from the truncated protein, inhibits editing activity when added in trans. We propose that the N-terminal domain of hADAR2 contains sequences that cause auto-inhibition of the enzyme. Our results suggest activation requires binding to an RNA substrate long enough to accommodate interactions with both dsRBMs.

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