Abstract

Ribosomal RNAs (rRNAs) have long been known to carry chemical modifications, including 2′O-methylation, pseudouridylation, N6-methyladenosine (m6A), and N6,6-dimethyladenosine. While the functions of many of these modifications are unclear, some are highly conserved and occur in regions of the ribosome critical for mRNA decoding. Both 28S rRNA and 18S rRNA carry single m6A sites, and while the methyltransferase ZCCHC4 has been identified as the enzyme responsible for the 28S rRNA m6A modification, the methyltransferase responsible for the 18S rRNA m6A modification has remained unclear. Here, we show that the METTL5-TRMT112 methyltransferase complex installs the m6A modification at position 1832 of human 18S rRNA. Our work supports findings that TRMT112 is required for METTL5 stability and reveals that human METTL5 mutations associated with microcephaly and intellectual disability disrupt this interaction. We show that loss of METTL5 in human cancer cell lines and in mice regulates gene expression at the translational level; additionally, Mettl5 knockout mice display reduced body size and evidence of metabolic defects. While recent work has focused heavily on m6A modifications in mRNA and their roles in mRNA processing and translation, we demonstrate here that deorphanizing putative methyltransferase enzymes can reveal previously unappreciated regulatory roles for m6A in noncoding RNAs.

Highlights

  • Chemical modifications on RNA are a critical facet of gene expression regulation

  • We found that protein-protein interactions between METTL5 and TRMT112 are important for METTL5 stability

  • Structural analysis of the three major human variants reported by Richard et al and Hu et al [18,20] suggests that all three mutations (R115Nfs*19, K191Vfs*10, G61D) would likely disrupt proper folding

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Summary

Introduction

Chemical modifications on RNA are a critical facet of gene expression regulation. Historically, modifications on tRNA and rRNA have been thought to have high stoichiometry and be relatively static, while work in the last decade on mRNA modifications suggests they are often sub-stoichiometric and more dynamic [1]. rRNA is heavily modified with numerous chemical marks, including pseudouridine, 2’O-methylation (2’OMe), N7-methylguanosine (m7G), N1-methyladenosine (m1A), N6-methyladenosine (m6A), and N6,6-methyladenosine (m6,6A) [2,3,4]. RNA-seq analysis of differentially expressed transcripts in METTL5-WT and METTL5-KO HeLa cells revealed enrichment for small molecule transport and lipid and cholesterol biosynthesis pathways

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