Abstract

The arachidonate 12-lipoxygenase (ALOX12) enzyme catalyzes polyunsaturated fatty acids and facilitates generation of bioactive lipid mediators associated with various biological processes and disease pathologies. The human genome assembly revealed that the ALOX12 gene overlaps an antisense non-coding gene designated as ALOX12-antisense 1 (ALOX12-AS1). This arrangement indicates that the uncharacterized ALOX12-AS1 long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) may bind to the sense coding ALOX12 mRNA to form an antisense-sense duplex providing the basis of a novel ALOX12 regulatory mechanism. Therefore, this study was designed to determine whether the interaction of ALOX12-AS1 with ALOX12 mRNA functions as an anti-sense/sense duplex-mediated regulatory mechanism controlling the cellular content of ALOX12. Our findings indicate that two major isoforms of ALOX12-AS1 lncRNA are ubiquitously expressed in a variety of primary adult human tissues and different transformed cell types. RNA-FISH revealed cell-type-specific cytosolic as well as nuclear and nucleolar localization of the lncRNA. Interestingly, phorbol ester-induced nucleo-cytoplasmic translocation of the lncRNA in monocytic THP-1 cells resulted in a reduction of ALOX12 protein without a concomitant change in its mRNA level. This indicated ALOX12-AS1 operates via an antisense-sense duplex-mediated translational downregulation mechanism. This deduction was validated by demonstrating sense/antisense duplex formation and an association of the duplex with ribosomal proteins in HEK293 cells. Overall, this study revealed a hitherto unknown mechanism of antisense lncRNA-mediated translational downregulation of ALOX12 that adds to the existing regulatory mechanisms for the modulation of potent bioactive lipid mediators that contribute to both health and disease.

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