Genome-Wide Scanning of Potential Hotspots for Adenosine Methylation: A Potential Path to Neuronal Development

Methylation of adenosines at N6 position (m6A) is the most frequent internal modification in mRNAs of the human genome and attributable to diverse roles in physiological development, and pathophysiological processes. However, studies on the role of m6A in neuronal development are sparse and not well...

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Autores principales: Sanjay Kumar, Lung-Wen Tsai, Pavan Kumar, Rajni Dubey, Deepika Gupta, Anjani Kumar Singh, Vishnu Swarup, Himanshu Narayan Singh
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: MDPI AG 2021
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m6A
Q
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/42bcb81b50ec4d8083b55d9fd41ff6f3
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Sumario:Methylation of adenosines at N6 position (m6A) is the most frequent internal modification in mRNAs of the human genome and attributable to diverse roles in physiological development, and pathophysiological processes. However, studies on the role of m6A in neuronal development are sparse and not well-documented. The m6A detection remains challenging due to its inconsistent pattern and less sensitivity by the current detection techniques. Therefore, we applied a sliding window technique to identify the consensus site (5′-GGACT-3′) <i>n</i> ≥ 2 and annotated all m6A hotspots in the human genome. Over 6.78 × 10<sup>7</sup> hotspots were identified and 96.4% were found to be located in the non-coding regions, suggesting that methylation occurs before splicing. Several genes, <i>RPS6K, NRP1, NRXN, EGFR, YTHDF2</i>, have been involved in various stages of neuron development and their functioning. However, the contribution of m6A in these genes needs further validation in the experimental model. Thus, the present study elaborates the location of m6A in the human genome and its function in neuron physiology.