Analysis of crosslinking sites suggests C. elegnas PIWI Argonaute exhibits flexible conformations for target recognition

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Abstract

Small RNAs play critical roles in gene regulation in diverse processes across organisms. Crosslinking, ligation, and analyses of sequence hybrid (CLASH) experiments have shown PIWI and Argonaute proteins bind to diverse mRNA targets, raising questions about their functional relevance and the degree of flexibility in target recognition.

As crosslinking-induced mutations (CIMs) provides nucleotide-resolution of RNA binding sites, we developed MUTACLASH to systematically analyze CIMs in piRNA and miRNA CLASH data in C. elegans . We found CIMs are enriched at the nucleotide positions of mRNA corresponding to the center of targeting piRNAs and miRNAs. Notably, CIMs are also enriched at nucleotides with local pairing mismatches to piRNA. In addition, distinct patterns of CIMs are observed between canonical and non-canonical base pairing interactions, suggesting that the worm PIWI Argonaute PRG-1 adopts distinct conformations for canonical vs. non-canonical interactions. Critically, non-canonical miRNA or piRNA binding sites with CIMs exhibit more regulatory effects than those without CIMs, demonstrating CIM analysis as a valuable approach in assessing functional significance of small RNA targeting sites in CLASH data. Together, our analyses reveal the landscapes of Argonaute crosslinking sites on mRNAs and highlight MUTACLASH as an advanced tool in analyzing CLASH data.

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