Selectivity and regulation of mRNA demethylation by iron-dependent dioxygenases

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R35 · $391,800 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

TITLE: Selectivity and regulation of mRNA demethylation by iron-dependent dioxygenases ABSTRACT: The long-term goals of this research program are to (1) define the structural and molecular mechanisms that control the selectivity and function of RNA demethylase enzymes, (2) develop new chemical tools to monitor RNA demethylation in cells, and (3) understand how the key cofactor ascorbic acid interacts with RNA demethylases and other iron-dependent dioxygenase family members to regulate their activity. Methyl modifications on mRNA tune transcript function, are essential for mammalian cell fate decisions, and play important roles in the progression of many human cancers. The iron-dependent dioxygenase enzymes FTO and AlkBH5 act as ‘erasers’ of highly abundant N6-methyladenosine (m6A) modifications found in the mRNA body and, in the case of FTO, N6,2’-O-dimethyladenosine (m6Am) modifications found on the 5’ mRNA cap. These RNA demethylases are overexpressed in cancers including glioblastoma and acute myeloid leukemia, where increased demethylation activity and reduced methyl modification levels promote tumorigenesis and cancer progression. Despite these clear links to human disease, we currently have a poor understanding of how FTO and AlkBH5 recognize their biological substrates, which mRNA transcripts are targeted for demethylation, and how demethylation influences mRNA function. Furthermore, FTO and AlkBH5 belong to the non-heme iron(II) and -ketoglutarate-dependent family of dioxygenases that require ascorbic acid (vitamin C) as a cofactor for efficient activity, but we have almost no structure-level insights into how ascorbic acid interacts with this diverse family of enzymes and how this physical interaction may potentiate dioxygenase activity in cells. This proposal combines approaches from biochemistry, structural biology, chemical biology, bioinorganic chemistry, and cell biology to determine the structural basis for RNA demethylase selectivity, develop novel probes to map demethylation targets across the transcriptome, and quantify and visualize the dioxygenase-ascorbic acid interaction to understand how this cofactor regulates enzymatic activity. The results from these proposed studies will significantly enhance our understanding of how cellular mRNA demethylation is regulated in cells and pave the way for therapeutics that target demethylation pathways in challenging cancers such as glioblastoma.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10276549
Project number
1R35GM143000-01
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE
Principal Investigator
Jeffrey Scott Mugridge
Activity code
R35
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$391,800
Award type
1
Project period
2021-08-01 → 2026-05-31