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Interpreting Reverse Transcriptase Termination and Mutation Events for Greater Insight into the Chemical Probing of RNA

Authors :
Michael Rutenberg-Schoenberg
Alec N. Sexton
Matthew D. Simon
Peter Y. Wang
Source :
Biochemistry. 56:4713-4721
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2017.

Abstract

Chemical probing has the power to provide insight into RNA conformation in vivo and in vitro, but interpreting the results depends on methods to detect the chemically modified nucleotides. Traditionally, the presence of modified bases was inferred from their ability to halt reverse transcriptase during primer extension and the locations of termination sites observed by electrophoresis or sequencing. More recently, modification-induced mutations have been used as a readout for chemical probing data. Given the variable propensity for mismatch incorporation and read-through with different reverse transcriptases, we examined how termination and mutation events compare to each other in the same chemical probing experiments. We found that mutations and terminations induced by dimethyl sulfate probing are both specific for methylated bases, but these two measures have surprisingly little correlation and represent largely nonoverlapping indicators of chemical modification data. We also show that specific biases for modified bases depend partly on local sequence context and that different reverse transcriptases show different biases toward reading a modification as a stop or a mutation. These results support approaches that incorporate analysis of both termination and mutation events into RNA probing experiments.

Details

ISSN :
15204995 and 00062960
Volume :
56
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biochemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c6476f548ecb9bb7f78b3a04b9f97398
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.7b00323