Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

NMDAR mediated dynamic changes in mA inversely correlates with neuronal translation.

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date of Publication

July 5, 2022

Journal

Scientific reports

Volume/Issue

12/1

ISSN

2045-2322

Epitranscriptome modifications are crucial in translation regulation and essential for maintaining cellular homeostasis. N6 methyladenosine (mA) is one of the most abundant and well-conserved epitranscriptome modifications, which is known to play a pivotal role in diverse aspects of neuronal functions. However, the role of mA modifications with respect to activity-mediated translation regulation and synaptic plasticity has not been studied. Here, we investigated the role of mA modification in response to NMDAR stimulation. We have consistently observed that 5 min NMDAR stimulation causes an increase in eEF2 phosphorylation. Correspondingly, NMDAR stimulation caused a significant increase in the mA signal at 5 min time point, correlating with the global translation inhibition. The NMDAR induced increase in the mA signal is accompanied by the redistribution of the mA marked RNAs from translating to the non-translating pool of ribosomes. The increased mA levels are well correlated with the reduced FTO levels observed on NMDAR stimulation. Additionally, we show that inhibition of FTO prevents NMDAR mediated changes in mA levels. Overall, our results establish RNA-based molecular readout which corelates with the NMDAR-dependent translation regulation which helps in understanding changes in protein synthesis.

Alternate Journal

Sci Rep

PubMed ID

35790863

PubMed Central ID

PMC9256623

Authors

Naveen Kumar Chandappa Gowda
Bharti Nawalpuri
Sarayu Ramakrishna
Vishwaja Jhaveri
Ravi S Muddashetty

Keywords

Neurons
Adenosine
Phosphorylation
RNA
Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate