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Sequence, Structure, and Context Preferences of Human RNA Binding Proteins.

Molecular cell · 2018 · Vol. 70 (5) · pp. 854-867.e9

Abstract

RNA binding proteins (RBPs) orchestrate the production, processing, and function of mRNAs. Here, we present the affinity landscapes of 78 human RBPs using an unbiased assay that determines the sequence, structure, and context preferences of these proteins in vitro by deep sequencing of bound RNAs. These data enable construction of "RNA maps" of RBP activity without requiring crosslinking-based assays. We found an unexpectedly low diversity of RNA motifs, implying frequent convergence of binding specificity toward a relatively small set of RNA motifs, many with low compositional complexity. Offsetting this trend, however, we observed extensive preferences for contextual features distinct from short linear RNA motifs, including spaced "bipartite" motifs, biased flanking nucleotide composition, and bias away from or toward RNA structure. Our results emphasize the importance of contextual features in RNA recognition, which likely enable targeting of distinct subsets of transcripts by different RBPs that recognize the same linear motif.

Publication Types

["Journal Article", "Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural", "Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't", "Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S."]

Keywords

MeSH Terms

["Base Sequence", "Binding Sites", "High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing", "Humans", "Nucleic Acid Conformation", "Nucleotide Motifs", "Protein Binding", "RNA", "RNA Recognition Motif Proteins", "Structure-Activity Relationship"]

Funding

T32 GM087237 NIGMS NIH HHS (United States)
U54 HG007005 NHGRI NIH HHS (United States)
R01 GM085319 NIGMS NIH HHS (United States)