Mapping in vivo protein-RNA interactions at single-nucleotide resolution from HITS-CLIP data

C Zhang, RB Darnell - Nature biotechnology, 2011 - nature.com
Nature biotechnology, 2011nature.com
Mammalian RNA complexity is regulated through interactions of RNA-binding proteins
(RBPs) with their target transcripts. High-throughput sequencing together with UV-
crosslinking and immunoprecipitation (HITS-CLIP) is able to globally map RBP-binding
footprint regions at a resolution of∼ 30-60 nucleotides. Here we describe a systematic way
to analyze HITS-CLIP data to identify exact crosslink sites, and thereby determine protein-
RNA interactions at single-nucleotide resolution. We found that reverse transcriptase used in …
Abstract
Mammalian RNA complexity is regulated through interactions of RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) with their target transcripts. High-throughput sequencing together with UV-crosslinking and immunoprecipitation (HITS-CLIP) is able to globally map RBP-binding footprint regions at a resolution of ∼30-60 nucleotides. Here we describe a systematic way to analyze HITS-CLIP data to identify exact crosslink sites, and thereby determine protein-RNA interactions at single-nucleotide resolution. We found that reverse transcriptase used in CLIP frequently skips the crosslinked amino-acid-RNA adduct, resulting in a nucleotide deletion. Genome-wide analysis of these crosslinking-induced mutation sites (CIMS) in HITS-CLIP data for Nova and Argonaute (Ago) proteins in mouse brain tissue revealed deletions in ∼8–20% of mRNA tags, which mapped to Nova and Ago binding sites on mRNA or miRNA. CIMS analysis provides a general and more precise means of mapping protein-RNA interactions than currently available methods and insight into the biochemical properties of such interactions in living tissues.
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