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Originally published In Press as doi:10.1074/jbc.R200024200 on November 20, 2002
J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 278, Issue 3, 1395-1398, January 17, 2003
MINIREVIEW
C-to-U RNA Editing: Mechanisms Leading to Genetic Diversity*
Valerie
Blanc and
Nicholas O.
Davidson §¶
From the Departments of Internal Medicine and
§ Molecular Biology and Pharmacology, Washington University
School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110
 |
Substitutional RNA Editing: Biochemical
Mechanisms and Targets for C-to-U RNA Editing in Mammals |
RNA editing is an important mechanism for regulating
genetic plasticity through the generation of alternative protein
products from a single structural gene. Substitutional RNA editing
employs a variety of genetic mechanisms, the biochemical basis of which has been elucidated following the development of in vitro
assays that recapitulate important elements of this process. Two types of substitutional RNA exist in mammals, namely A-to-I and C-to-U RNA
editing (1, 2). Important biochemical distinctions between these two
processes provide an informative basis for understanding the mechanisms
of C-to-U RNA editing and the adaptations that control target specificity.
A-to-I RNA editing is mediated by a family of adenosine deaminases
acting on double-stranded RNA
(ADARs)1 with partially
overlapping target specificity (1, 2). The absolute requirement for a
double-stranded RNA template distinguishes A-to-I and C-to-U RNA
editing because the former requires a pre-mRNA template containing
intronic regions and is thus biochemically confined to unspliced
transcripts. A further distinction biochemically is that ADAR enzymes
do not require additional cofactors. ADARs contain both double-stranded
RNA binding domains and a deaminase domain and function as modular
editing enzymes (2, 3).
The best characterized example of C-to-U RNA editing
involves the nuclear transcript encoding intestinal apolipoprotein B (apoB) (4). ApoB RNA editing changes a CAA to a
UAA stop codon, generating a truncated protein, apoB48 (4).
ApoB RNA editing has important effects on lipoprotein metabolism, and
its emergence defines distinct pathways for intestinal and hepatic
lipid transport in mammals (4). C-to-U editing of apoB RNA requires a
single-strand template (Fig. 1) with well
defined characteristics in the immediate vicinity of the edited base,
as well as protein cofactors that assemble into a functional complex
referred to as a holoenzyme or editosome. This functional complex
includes a minimal core composed of apobec-1, the catalytic deaminase,
and a competence factor, apobec-1 complementation factor (ACF), that
functions as an adaptor protein by binding both the deaminase and the
RNA substrate (Fig. 1). The interaction of these protein components and
their higher order interactions with the nuclear transcript illustrates
the complexity of site-selectivity in C-to-U RNA editing.

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Fig. 1.
C-to-U RNA editing of apolipoprotein B. The model for an ~35-nucleotide region of apoB RNA flanking the
edited base (asterisk) is shown. A schematic
representation illustrates apobec-1 (red) and ACF
(blue) binding to RNA both 5' and 3' of the edited base and
depicts the presence of additional proteins that may modulate assembly
of the holoenzyme (green). Note that the stoichiometry of
apobec-1 and ACF molecules with respect to the active enzyme is
unknown. The model emphasizes the role of both cis-acting elements
within the vicinity of the edited base (mooring sequence is
bolded) and the requirement for an optimal structure,
conferred by both 5' and 3' efficiency elements.
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A second example of C-to-U RNA editing in mammals involves
site-specific deamination of a CGA to UGA codon in the
neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) mRNA (5). NF1 RNA editing generates
a translational termination codon at position 3916 that is predicted to
truncate the protein product neurofibromin at the 5' end of a critical domain (6) involved in GTPase activation (Fig.
2). Unlike apoB RNA editing, there is no
formal proof that a truncated protein is generated. This example of
C-to-U RNA editing has been demonstrated in peripheral nerve sheath
tumors from patients with NF1 and may share elements of the same
machinery as apoB RNA editing, as discussed below.

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Fig. 2.
C-to-U RNA editing of neurofibromatosis type
1. The genomic organization of exons 21-24 and the alternatively
spliced exon 23A (pink) are aligned above the region of NF1
RNA containing the edited base (3916). A 41-nucleotide
region of NF1 RNA is aligned with the corresponding region from human
apoB RNA (hapoB) and demonstrates both the conservation in
the mooring sequence and the presence of apobec-1 binding sites in
proximity to the edited base (adapted from Ref. 17). The edited
RNA is predicted to encode a truncated protein that eliminates the
GTPase activating domain although it is possible that the edited
transcript is unstable and is degraded.
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A third target for C-to-U editing, NAT1, was revealed following
forced transgenic overexpression of apobec-1 in murine and rabbit
hepatocytes (7). NAT1 is homologous to the translational repressor
eIF4G and undergoes C-to-U editing at multiple sites, with the creation
of stop codons that in turn reduce protein abundance (7).
 |
Intracellular Topology of C-to-U RNA Editing: Lessons from
ApoB RNA |
C-to-U RNA editing of endogenous apoB in vivo is
largely confined to spliced and polyadenylated nuclear transcripts (8). More recent studies using an apoB editing cassette cloned into constructs containing intronic sequences and transfected into cells
that support C-to-U RNA editing suggest two important findings (9).
First, introns suppress editing, an effect rescued by mutating the
splice donor and acceptor sites in the chimeric cassette (9). Second, a
Rev complementation assay used to produce conditional export of
unspliced apoB RNA demonstrated that unspliced RNA is intrinsically
capable of undergoing editing (9). These results, considered together
with the earlier in vivo findings, suggest several testable
conclusions. First, apoB RNA editing occurs in the nucleus and is
selective for spliced transcripts rather than pre-mRNA. This is a
crucial finding, because A-to-I RNA editing occurs before
splicing. Second, spliceosome assembly itself or alternatively
targeting RNA to the splicing pathway inhibits C-to-U editing.
Plausible mechanisms for such inhibition include protein-protein or
protein-RNA interactions between components of the spliceosome and the
apoB RNA editing holoenzyme that hinder enzymatic activity in the
latter. How might these possibilities be reconciled in the in
vivo situation? In the context of mammalian apoB, splice donor and
acceptor interactions at the termini of a large exon (exon 26, >7 kb)
would likely be physically remote from the site of assembly and action
of the editing enzyme. It is worth noting, however, that formation of a
double-stranded template for A-to-I RNA editing requires base-pairing
between the exonic region containing the targeted base and sequences
within an adjacent intron, which in some instances are located ~2 kb
downstream (3). The availability of additional structural models for
large transcripts should permit direct experimental validation of these possibilities.
 |
C-to-U RNA Editing Machinery: Cis-acting Elements |
ApoB RNA editing is exquisitely site-specific, targeting a single
cytidine in a transcript spanning greater than 14,000 residues. However, the minimal sequence information for this process appears contained within ~30 nucleotides flanking the edited base (10, 11),
with more distant elements both 5' and 3' permitting enzymatic deamination with greater efficiency (12, 13). An 11-nucleotide mooring
sequence located 4-6 nucleotides downstream of the edited base is
particularly important (10, 11), but selection of the editing site
likely also depends upon RNA secondary structure. RNase mapping and
folding algorithms together predict that the apoB template folds into a
stem-loop structure with the targeted cytidine located within an
exposed loop of RNA (13, 14). A consensus binding site for apobec-1
(UUUN(A/U)U) was determined by circular permutation analysis and is
predicted to be located 3 nucleotides downstream of the editing site,
partially overlapping the 5' terminus of the mooring sequence, at the
apex of a stem-loop (Fig. 1) (15). Identification of a consensus
binding site for apobec-1 provides an additional screen for other RNAs
that may be substrates for this enzyme. Among these candidate targets
are RNA transcripts containing the consensus binding site embedded within the canonical destabilization element (UUAUU(A/U)(A/U)), which
is found in the 3'-untranslated region of RNAs known to be
regulated through alteration in stability (15).
A second candidate C-to-U editing template was identified through
homology searches, which revealed that a CGA codon in the NF1 mRNA
was changed to a UGA stop codon (5, 16). Alignment of a 40-nucleotide
NF1 mRNA encompassing the editing site reveals 50% identity with
apoB mRNA, with 6 of 11 mismatches in the downstream cassette
encoding the mooring sequence (Fig. 2). Recent studies have
demonstrated several important features concerning C-to-U RNA editing
of NF1 in tumors from these patients. First, the subset of tumors that
demonstrate C-to-U RNA editing of NF1 contain high levels of an
alternatively spliced downstream exon (exon 23A, Fig. 2) (17). RNA
modeling predictions suggest that inclusion of the 63-nucleotide exon
resulting from alternative splicing permits the transcript to fold into
a more favorable configuration with respect to access of the active
site of the deaminase to the targeted
cytidine.2 Second, tumors
that demonstrate C-to-U RNA editing express apobec-1 mRNA, the
transcript encoding the catalytic deaminase of the apoB RNA editing
holoenzyme. In addition, a consensus apobec-1 binding site has been
identified upstream of the editing site and appears functional as
evidenced by UV-cross-linking studies (17). Taken together, the
findings suggest that C-to-U RNA editing of NF1 may share certain
elements of the apoB RNA editing machinery, although editing occurs at
lower efficiency (<20% for NF1 versus >90% for
intestinal apoB), presumably the result of mooring sequence mismatches.
 |
C-to-U RNA Editing Machinery: Trans-acting Factors and Complex
Formation |
ApoB RNA editing is mediated by a multicomponent complex with a
minimal, two-component core composed of the catalytic deaminase apobec-1 (4) and a competence factor, ACF (18, 19).
Apobec-1--
Apobec-1 is highly conserved and likely evolved from
a common ancestral cytidine deaminase (20). Like most cytidine
deaminases, apobec-1 functions as a dimer (20), with a composite active site representing asymmetric contributions from each monomer that permits both substrate binding and deamination, together with a
leucine-rich pseudoactive site at the carboxyl terminus, involved in
dimerization (20). The active site residues and their spacing are
conserved in all cytidine deaminases and define a signature motif
(HXE(X)nPCXXC) for this gene
family. Apobec-1, unlike the Escherichia coli homolog,
demonstrates RNA binding activity, which requires two aromatic residues
(Phe-66, Phe-87) within the catalytic site (20). Apobec-1 has no
canonical RNA binding motifs in its primary sequence. However,
mutations that interfere with RNA binding do not function in C-to-U RNA
editing despite retaining cytidine deaminase activity (15, 20).
Accordingly, apobec-1 is proposed to have evolved from an ancient
cytidine deaminase that has acquired RNA specificity, allowing targeted nucleoside deamination of an RNA (20).
As alluded to above, forced transgenic overexpression of apobec-1 led
to a cancer phenotype in the setting of promiscuous editing of
cytidines in both apoB RNA and NAT1, a translational inhibitor involved
in early embryogenesis (7, 21). This gain of function phenotype implies
that overexpression of apobec-1 is deleterious to the organism,
although the proximate mechanism leading to dysplasia and cancer is yet
to be defined. Consistent with this implication, host adaptations
modulate the expression of apobec-1 in sporadic human colorectal cancer
and in experimental colonic adenoma-carcinoma formation in
carcinogen-treated rats (22-24).
Apobec-1-related Genes--
EST data base searches for
apobec-1-related proteins based on the signature motif has revealed new
members of the gene family. Among these, apobec-2/ARCD1 is located on
chromosome 6 and represents an abundant transcript in heart and
skeletal muscle (25, 26). Apobec-2/ARCD1 is an authentic cytidine
deaminase with apoB RNA binding activity but does not mediate C-to-U
editing of apoB RNA, and its primary target, if any, is unknown (26).
However, ARCD1 interacts physically with both apobec-1 and ACF and
inhibits apoB RNA editing in trans, possibly through
interactions that alter the composition or stoichiometry of the
holoenzyme (26). This observation is comparable with the inhibition of
A-to-I RNA editing of GluR-B by ADAR3, a third member of the ADAR
family (27).
Another apobec-1 homolog, activation-induced deaminase (AID), is
specifically expressed in B lymphocytes during immunoglobulin class
switch recombination and is required for somatic hypermutation. The
chromosomal locus for human AID is adjacent to that of
APOBEC1 on 12p13.2, suggesting that they may represent a
gene duplication (26, 28). Targeted deletion of AID yielded
a murine model of hyper-IgM syndrome resulting from a block in class
switch recombination (29), and mutations in the human AID
gene were demonstrated in the autosomal recessive form of hyper-IgM
syndrome (HIGM2) (30). AID is structurally related to apobec-1 and
demonstrates monomeric cytidine deaminase activity yet does not
demonstrate RNA binding or RNA editing activity on any of the known
substrates (26, 29). Indeed the intriguing possibility exists that its primary target may be DNA and not RNA (31).
An additional cluster of apobec-related genes,
phorbolins/ARCD2-7/apobec-3 (A-to-G), has been found on chromosome 22 (26, 28). They all display typical structural features of the cytidine deaminase active site described above, including the aromatic residues
critical for RNA binding activity, and apobec-3G demonstrates RNA
binding activity for AU-rich templates. Nevertheless, none of these
gene products demonstrate C-to-U editing activity on any known RNA
template (28). Distribution of mRNAs encoding these genes,
particularly apobec-3C and -3G, appears widespread, and several are
found at increased abundance in tumor tissues and cancer cell lines,
raising the intriguing possibility that they may be involved in growth
or proliferation (28).
ACF--
Glycerol gradients of tissue extracts revealed that
C-to-U RNA editing activity fractionated as a 27 S particle (32)
leading to the concept of a multicomponent editing enzyme complex.
Approaches to identify putative complementation factor(s) were
predicated on the assumption that these factor(s) would bind apoB
mRNA and/or apobec-1. This objective was conceptually simple but
technically daunting, and the recent cloning of ACF by two independent
groups represents a major advance in the field (18, 19). Recombinant ACF together with recombinant apobec-1 is sufficient to mediate C-to-U
editing of synthetic apoB RNA (18, 19), and these two components,
expressed either in vitro or in yeast, represent the minimal
core of the holoenzyme (33). ACF is a novel 65-kDa protein, widely
expressed in human tissues (18, 19). Alignment of the predicted
structural motifs within ACF reveals the presence of three
non-identical RNA recognition motifs at the amino terminus, with a
putative double-stranded RNA binding domain and 6 RG repeats within the
carboxyl terminus (18, 19). UV-cross-link experiments identified an ACF
binding site in apoB RNA spanning a 12-nucleotide sequence surrounding
the editing site and partially overlapping the proximal end of the
mooring sequence (Fig. 1) (34). Systematic mutagenesis of recombinant
ACF has identified the functional domains involved in apoB RNA binding,
apobec-1 interaction, and apobec-1 complementation of C-to-U editing.
Both the apobec-1 interaction and apoB RNA binding domains are required
for C-to-U editing (35, 36). However, the other putative RNA binding
domains in ACF are dispensable, raising the question of whether these
domains may play other roles in RNA processing.
The human chromosomal ACF locus spans ~80 kb on chromosome
10 and encodes 9 distinct splice variants from 15 exons (37). The
pattern of splice variants in human small intestine and liver reveals
two dominant ACF isoforms, ACF64 and ACF65, the latter containing an
8-amino acid insertion as a result of alternative splicing of exon 12 (35, 38). There is no functional distinction between ACF64 and ACF65
(35, 38). Other splice variants have been demonstrated at lower
abundance in human tissues and demonstrate either low or no activity.
None of these splice variants undergo developmental regulation (37).
Whether these isoforms play a role in relation to apoB RNA editing or
other aspects of RNA metabolism and function is unknown.
Apobec-1/ACF/ApoB RNA-binding
Proteins--
Identification of other components of the holoenzyme
remains elusive. Among these various candidate components are two apoB RNA editing inhibitors: CUGBP2 and GRY-RBP (34, 39, 40). CUGBP2 is a
nucleocytoplasmic RNA-binding protein that cofractionates with ACF and
binds apoB RNA upstream of the editing site but inhibits apoB RNA
editing in vitro (39). GRY-RBP, by contrast, is homologous to ACF (34, 40) and shares functional characteristics including the
ability to bind apobec-1 as well as apoB RNA (34). In addition, GRY-RBP
colocalizes in the nucleus with ACF and with apobec-1 but does not
complement apobec-1 in C-to-U RNA editing. Rather, GRY-RBP inhibits
editing in vitro and in vivo in a
dose-dependent manner, potentially by sequestering ACF or
alternatively apobec-1 and/or apoB RNA (34). This range of possible
interactions raises the question of whether a hierarchy of cognate
targets exists for these proteins.
Interestingly, several of the candidate proteins proposed for the apoB
RNA holoenzyme and identified through their ability to bind apoB RNA
and/or through their interaction with apobec-1 have been demonstrated
to participate in other RNA processing events including splicing,
mRNA turnover, and translation. Thus, GRY-RBP has been recently
identified as a member of the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein Q
family (41). Two hybrid screens performed using apobec-1 as bait
revealed interactions with several different proteins. Among these,
heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein C1 inhibits apoB RNA editing in
isolated rat liver extracts (42). Two other proteins, ABBP-1 and
ABBP-2/HEDJ, are homologous to human heterogeneous nuclear
ribonucleoprotein A/B and Hsp40 chaperone, respectively (43, 44). No
direct evidence exists for a primary role for either protein in apoB
RNA editing in vivo, although immunodepletion of either
protein reduced in vitro apoB RNA editing from extracts
prepared from editing-competent cells (43, 44). The importance of these
proteins in apoB RNA editing will await further study.
 |
Subcellular Localization of the Components of the Editing
Machinery: Another Level of Regulation of ApoB RNA Editing |
Immunocytochemical localization of endogenous apobec-1 has proven
challenging because this is a low abundance protein but the data from
transfection studies point toward a predominantly cytoplasmic
localization (34, 45). Thus the determinants of nuclear-cytoplasmic
distribution of apobec-1 presumably require interaction with one or
more of the protein components of the holoenzyme, most plausibly ACF.
The primary amino acid sequence of ACF contains a short stretch of
basic residues forming an SV40-type nuclear localization signal (18,
19) and immunofluorescence microscopy of cells transfected with
FLAG-tagged ACF reveals a predominantly nuclear distribution (34, 35).
However, mutagenesis of the basic residues within this putative nuclear
localization signal failed to modify the nuclear localization of ACF,
suggesting that another domain targets ACF to the nucleus (35).
Co-expression of apobec-1 with ACF leads to colocalization within the
nucleus of transfected cells (34, 35), and fractionation of nuclear extracts indicates the presence of ACF within large 27 S complexes demonstrated to contain editing activity (46). These findings suggest
that interaction of apobec-1 with ACF facilitates their combined
translocation into the nucleus and subsequent formation of a holoenzyme
complex. Further resolution of the mechanisms regulating the
distribution of the core components of the apoB RNA editing holoenzyme
will be of great importance.
Recent findings suggest that nuclear translocation of apobec-1 and ACF
may represent a novel mechanism accounting for the metabolic regulation
of C-to-U editing activity, presumably by altering the effective
concentration and delivery of the enzyme components to the site of
accumulation of the substrate (46). One possible scenario involves an
"anchoring/release" cycle mechanism similar to that described for
the nuclear localization of the Xenopus transcription factor
xnf 7 or the type II cAMP-dependent protein kinase (47,
48). This possibility is consistent with the finding of increased
nuclear abundance of rat hepatocyte ACF following insulin or ethanol
exposure (46).
 |
Conclusions |
C-to-U RNA editing is an important mechanism for amplifying
mammalian genetic diversity in a regulated manner. Key to the success
of this adaptation is the ability to define and limit access of the
machinery to avoid enzymatic modifications within unintended targets.
The identification of the core components of the apoB RNA editing
holoenzyme and the ability to examine the role of new candidate genes
that represent elements of the larger complex will likely reveal
further functions in RNA metabolism. Establishing functional links
between these distinct events should represent an exciting challenge
for future years.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
We acknowledge valuable discussions with
current and former laboratory members, particularly Shri Anant, Kim
Buhman, Jeff Henderson, Susan Kennedy, Debnath Mukhophadyay, and Libby
Newberry. Finally, we apologize to colleagues whose work could not be
cited directly due to length constraints.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
This minireview will be reprinted
in the 2003 Minireview Compendium, which
will be available in January, 2004. Work cited from the authors' laboratory was
supported by National Institutes of Health Grants DK-56260 and HL-38180
(to N. O. D.). This is the second article of two in the "RNA
Editing Minireview Series."
¶
To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.:
314-362-2027; Fax: 314-362-2033; E-mail: nod@im.wustl.edu.
Published, JBC Papers in Press, November 20, 2002, DOI 10.1074/jbc.R200024200
2
D. Mukhopadhyay and N. O. Davidson,
unpublished observations.
 |
ABBREVIATIONS |
The abbreviations used are:
ADAR, adenosine
deaminases acting on double-stranded RNA;
apo, apolipoprotein;
ACF, apobec-1 complementation factor;
NF1, neurofibromatosis type 1;
AID, activation-induced deaminase.
 |
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