High levels of RNA-editing site conservation amongst 15 laboratory mouse strains

被引:125
作者
Petr Danecek
Christoffer Nellåker
Rebecca E McIntyre
Jorge E Buendia-Buendia
Suzannah Bumpstead
Chris P Ponting
Jonathan Flint
Richard Durbin
Thomas M Keane
David J Adams
机构
[1] Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Hinxton, Cambridge
[2] MRC Functional Genomics Unit, Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX1 3QX, South Parks Road
[3] The Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics, Oxford OX3 7BN, Roosevelt Drive
基金
英国医学研究理事会; 英国惠康基金;
关键词
Editing Site; Editing Level; Editing Cluster; Laboratory Mouse Strain; Alignment Artifact;
D O I
10.1186/gb-2012-13-4-r26
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Adenosine-to-inosine (A-to-I) editing is a site-selective post-transcriptional alteration of double-stranded RNA by ADAR deaminases that is crucial for homeostasis and development. Recently the Mouse Genomes Project generated genome sequences for 17 laboratory mouse strains and rich catalogues of variants. We also generated RNA-seq data from whole brain RNA from 15 of the sequenced strains.Results: Here we present a computational approach that takes an initial set of transcriptome/genome mismatch sites and filters these calls taking into account systematic biases in alignment, single nucleotide variant calling, and sequencing depth to identify RNA editing sites with high accuracy. We applied this approach to our panel of mouse strain transcriptomes identifying 7,389 editing sites with an estimated false-discovery rate of between 2.9 and 10.5%. The overwhelming majority of these edits were of the A-to-I type, with less than 2.4% not of this class, and only three of these edits could not be explained as alignment artifacts. We validated 24 novel RNA editing sites in coding sequence, including two non-synonymous edits in the Cacna1d gene that fell into the IQ domain portion of the Cav1.2 voltage-gated calcium channel, indicating a potential role for editing in the generation of transcript diversity.Conclusions: We show that despite over two million years of evolutionary divergence, the sites edited and the level of editing at each site is remarkably consistent across the 15 strains. In the Cds2 gene we find evidence for RNA editing acting to preserve the ancestral transcript sequence despite genomic sequence divergence. © 2012 Danecek et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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