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Lessons from discovery of true ADAR RNA editing sites in a human cell line


ABSTRACT: Conversion, or editing, of adenosine (A) into inosine (I) catalyzed by specialized cellular enzymes represents one of the most common naturally occurring post-transcriptional RNA modifications found in multiple species from fruit flies to humans with emerging connection to disease, particularly cancer. The A-to-I conversion can happen at specific sites in certain RNA molecules and lead to mRNA recoding and increase in proteome diversity, changes in RNA stability, splicing and regulation. Such sites could be detected as adenine-to-guanine sequence changes by RNA sequencing. Thus, not surprisingly, the advent of next-generation sequencing has caused a massive explosion of reported sites detected by a slew of genome-wide studies in different species leading to wide ranges of conclusions about biological implications of the A-to-I editing on the physiology of normal and cancerous cells. Nonetheless, extensive independent validation of the authenticity of the reported sites is often missing in such endeavors which combined with the relatively high error rate of next generation sequence leads to lingering questions about the validity of the current compendiums of the editing sites and conclusions based on them. Therefore, in this work, we provide a comprehensive and an extensively validated list of A-to-I editing sites in a human cancer cell line. Strikingly, we found that the current analytical methods suffer from very high false positive rates and that a significant fraction of sites in the public databases can not be validated. We provide a potential solution to these problems and discuss their ramifications to the current state of genomics of RNA editing as well as potential biological conclusions drawn from analysis of the compendium of true A-to-I editing sites in a human cancer cell line.

ORGANISM(S): Homo sapiens

PROVIDER: GSE222170 | GEO | 2023/06/05

REPOSITORIES: GEO

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