tRNA thioepitranscriptome: a new level of translational control in the developing vessels
Yifan Zhu – Hector RCD Awardee Sofia-Iris Bibli
Transfer (t) RNAs are a major part of the translational machinery and recent studies have proposed a number of mutations in enzymes involved in the modification of tRNAs as being linked to human diseases. However, our knowledge about human tRNA modifications is fragmentary, and the most comprehensive tRNA modification database contain information on only 20% of human tRNA modifications. Interestingly, tRNA thiolation; resulting from intracellular sulfur mobilization was found to regulate protein translation in bacteria and yeast and determine their responses to heat stress. Whether a similar mechanism also occurs in humans is not yet known. This proposal will address the hypothesis that sulfur-containing amino acids in the microenvironment of human endothelial cells determine tRNA thiolation that, in turn, regulates the translational machinery during vessel development. The goals are to map the tRNA thio-epitranscriptome for the first time, identify sulfur mobilization routes, determine whether thio-modifications affect the translational machinery and codon biased or tRNA fragmentation processes and link the dynamic control of tRNA thiolation with endothelial cell proliferation. Should the hypothesis be proven correct it has the potential to place the thio-epitranscriptome at the center of epitranscriptomic based therapeutics against excessive vessel growth in human diseases.
Protein synthesis consumes enormous amounts of energy and must be tightly regulated. Numerous cellular mechanisms are involved in the regulation of translation, and specific modifications of RNA (the epitranscriptome) are highly conserved among different species. Our understanding of the biological regulation and role of the epitranscriptome is limited, but it is clear that dynamic modifications of RNA represent a new layer of control of genetic information. Tens of millions of RNA transcripts are present in a human cell and tRNA is the most extensively modified RNA species with, on an average, 13 modifications per molecule. Such changes are required to ensure the correct folding of tRNAs, stabilize the conformation of the tRNA anticodon loop, facilitate interactions with aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, and modulate decoding as well as ribosome processing. Studies to-date have focused on bacteria and yeast, which have developed sophisticated pathways to regulate translation in response to nutrients. At least in these organisms, the most abundant modifications involves de novo sulfur biosynthesis which is required to thiolate tRNAs. This fascinating mechanism has not yet been addressed in advanced organisms. A potential source of highly reactive sulfur moieties for tRNA modification in mammalian cells is the metabolism of sulfur-containing amino acids. Of these, the cysteine has been linked with sulfur transfer, and a post-translational modification referred to as persulfidation or S‑sulfhydration, which is responsible for the preservation of vascular homeostasis. Vascular homeostasis and the transition from quiescent to proliferative phenotypes is a topic of interest in conditions that vascular repair is important for organismal resilience mechanisms after injury (i.e. ischemic insults) as well as in multiple human diseases with increased vascular angiogenic capacity (i.e. cancer). Although, signalling molecules and growth factors have been shown to regulate the complex morphogenetic events involved in new blood vessel formation, protein synthesis control mechanisms remain understudied. Whether, modifications of tRNAs and the representation of tRNA isoacceptors regulate endothelial cell protein synthesis and division is unclear. Herein, we hypothesize that sulfur-containing amino acids in the vascular human system are the source of a novel translation-regulating code referred here as the thio-epitranscriptome. Understanding whether or not the mobilization of sulfur, from sulfur-containing amino acids, can impact on tRNA thio-modifications and subsequently on gene expression is a previously unexplored topic that has the potential to play a significant role in the adaptation of cells to a particular micro-environment.
This project will address the hypothesis that the metabolism of sulfur-containing amino acids determines cellular levels of free sulfide to modify translation, via tRNA thio-modification(s). Such a mechanism would be able to fine tune protein translation by means of altered cellular sulfur flux and is a process that has potential importance in cell division. We plan to focus on the mammalian system to: 1) identify the positions of thiolated nucleosides in tRNAs, 2) determine the source of sulfur ultimately leading to thiolation and assess mechanisms involved in the dynamic control of tRNA thio-modifications, and 3) determine whether thio-modifications affect the translational machinery and codon biased or tRNA fragmentation. Each of these aims should deliver information required to establish the thio-epitranscriptome as a novel level of translation control that potentially impacts on vessel homeostasis and diseases.
Yifan Zhu
Heidelberg UniversitySupervised by
Sofia-Iris Bibli
Biology, MedicineHector RCD Awardee since 2022