Abstract

The relatively recent focus on the widespread occurrence and abundance of circular RNAs (circRNA) in the human cell nucleus has sparked an intensive interest in their existence and possible roles in cell gene expression and physiology. The presence of circRNAs in mammalian mitochondria, however, has been under-explored. Mitochondrial mRNAs differ from those produced from nuclear genes because they lack introns and are transcribed as poly-cistronic transcripts that are endonucleolytically cleaved, leaving transcripts with very small 5′ and 3′ UTRs. Circular RNAs have been identified in the semi-autonomous organelles of single-celled organisms and plants but their purpose has not been clearly demonstrated. The goal of our project was to test the hypothesis, processed mRNAs are circularized in vertebrate mitochondria as a necessary RNA processing step prior to translation. Mitochondrial mRNAs were isolated from the human cell line HEK293 and evidence of circularization sought by treating RNA with RNAse-R and then amplifying putative 3′-5′ junction sites. Sequence results demonstrated the occurrence of mRNA circularization within each coding region of the mitochondrial genome. However, in most cases the circRNAs carried coding regions that had been truncated, suggesting they were not translatable. Quantification of the circularized versions of the mRNAs revealed they comprise a small portion (~10%) of the total mRNA. These findings demonstrate that mRNA circularization occurs in mammalian mitochondria but it does not appear to play a role in making translatable mRNAs.

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