Dynamic mRNA modification in the form of N 6 -methyladenosine (m6A) adds considerable richness and sophistication to gene regulation. The m6A mark is asymmetrically distributed along mature mRNAs, with approximately… Click to show full abstract
Dynamic mRNA modification in the form of N 6 -methyladenosine (m6A) adds considerable richness and sophistication to gene regulation. The m6A mark is asymmetrically distributed along mature mRNAs, with approximately 35% of m6A residues located within the coding region (CDS). It has been suggested that methylation in CDS slows down translation elongation. However, neither the decoding feature of endogenous mRNAs nor the physiological significance of CDS m6A has been clearly defined. Here, we found that CDS m6A leads to ribosome pausing in a codon-specific manner. Unexpectedly, removing CDS m6A from these transcripts results in a further decrease of translation. A systemic analysis of RNA structural datasets revealed that CDS m6A positively regulates translation by resolving mRNA secondary structures. We further demonstrate that the elongation-promoting effect of CDS methylation requires the RNA helicase-containing m6A reader YTHDC2. Our findings established the physiological significance of CDS methylation and uncovered non-overlapping function of m6A reader proteins. Several functions have been proposed for m6A in RNA metabolism, yet little is known regarding the specific functions of individual m6A readers. Here, the authors observe that the m6A reader YTHDC2 — which contains an RNA helicase domain — acts on the coding region to promotes mRNA translation by resolving secondary structures.
               
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