Direct m6A recognition by IMP1 underlays an alternative model of target selection for non-canonical methyl-readers

Author:

Nicastro Giuseppe1,Abis Giancarlo2,Klein Pierre2,Esteban-Serna Sofia2ORCID,Gallagher Christopher2,Chaves-Arquero Belen2,Cai Yuyang2,Figueiredo Angelo Miguel2ORCID,Martin Stephen R3,Patani Rickie4ORCID,Taylor Ian A1ORCID,Ramos Andres2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Macromolecular Structure Laboratory, The Francis Crick Institute , 1 Midland Road, London NW1 1AT, UK

2. Division of Biosciences, Institute of Structural and Molecular Biology, University College London , London , UK

3. Structural Biology Technology Platform, The Francis Crick Institute , 1 Midland Rd, London NW1 1AT, UK

4. Human Stem Cells and Neurodegeneration Laboratory, The Francis Crick Institute , 1 Midland Road, London NW1 1AT, UK

Abstract

Abstract m6A methylation provides an essential layer of regulation in organismal development, and is aberrant in a range of cancers and neuro-pathologies. The information encoded by m6A methylation is integrated into existing RNA regulatory networks by RNA binding proteins that recognise methylated sites, the m6A readers. m6A readers include a well-characterised class of dedicated proteins, the YTH proteins, as well as a broader group of multi-functional regulators where recognition of m6A is only partially understood. Molecular insight in this recognition is essential to build a mechanistic understanding of global m6A regulation. In this study, we show that the reader IMP1 recognises the m6A using a dedicated hydrophobic platform that assembles on the methyl moiety, creating a stable high-affinity interaction. This recognition is conserved across evolution and independent from the underlying sequence context but is layered upon the strong sequence specificity of IMP1 for GGAC RNA. This leads us to propose a concept for m6A regulation where methylation plays a context-dependent role in the recognition of selected IMP1 targets that is dependent on the cellular concentration of available IMP1, differing from that observed for the YTH proteins.

Funder

UK Medical Research Council

UK BBRSC

Francis Crick Institute

Cancer Research UK

Wellcome Trust

MRC Senior Clinical Fellowship

UKRI

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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