Genetics, Vol. 155, 1149-1160, July 2000, Copyright © 2000

RNA Editing of the Drosophila para Na+ Channel Transcript: Evolutionary Conservation and Developmental Regulation

Christopher J. Hanrahana, Michael J. Palladinoa, Barry Ganetzkyb, and Robert A. Reenana
a Department of Genetics and Developmental Biology, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, Connecticut 06030
b Laboratory of Genetics, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706

Corresponding author: Robert A. Reenan, Department of Genetics and Developmental Biology-MC3301, University of Connecticut Health Center, 263 Farmington Ave., Farmington, CT 06030., rreenan{at}neuron.uchc.edu (E-mail)

Communicating editor: R. S. HAWLEY


*  ABSTRACT
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Post-transcriptional editing of pre-mRNAs through the action of dsRNA adenosine deaminases results in the modification of particular adenosine (A) residues to inosine (I), which can alter the coding potential of the modified transcripts. We describe here three sites in the para transcript, which encodes the major voltage-activated Na+ channel polypeptide in Drosophila, where RNA editing occurs. The occurrence of RNA editing at the three sites was found to be developmentally regulated. Editing at two of these sites was also conserved across species between the D. melanogaster and D. virilis. In each case, a highly conserved region was found in the intron downstream of the editing site and this region was shown to be complementary to the region of the exonic editing site. Thus, editing at these sites would appear to involve a mechanism whereby the edited exon forms a base-paired secondary structure with the distant conserved noncoding sequences located in adjacent downstream introns, similar to the mechanism shown for A-to-I RNA editing of mammalian glutamate receptor subunits (GluRs). For the third site, neither RNA editing nor the predicted RNA secondary structures were evolutionarily conserved. Transcripts from transgenic Drosophila expressing a minimal editing site construct for this site were shown to faithfully undergo RNA editing. These results demonstrate that Na+ channel diversity in Drosophila is increased by RNA editing via a mechanism analogous to that described for transcripts encoding mammalian GluRs.


RNA editing is a process that post-transcriptionally modifies RNA. In the case of nuclear pre-mRNA editing, this process changes the coding potential of the resulting mRNA (for reviews see BENNE 1996 Down; SIMPSON and EMESON 1996 Down; BASS 1997 Down). Adenosine-to-inosine (A-to-I) RNA editing occurs by the hydrolytic deamination of A to I and is accomplished through the action of editases. The editases make up a family of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) adenosine deaminases, which include ADAR-1, ADAR-2, and ADAR-like enzymes (BASS and WEINTRAUB 1988 Down; WAGNER et al. 1989 Down; MELCHER et al. 1996A Down, MELCHER et al. 1996B Down; BASS et al. 1997 Down). Editases direct modification of adenosines within substrates either specifically or nonspecifically. Nonspecific editing, the conversion of many adenosines to inosine (<=50%) in a restricted area of a transcript, can be directed by the ADAR-1,2 enzymes (BASS and WEINTRAUB 1988 Down; WAGNER et al. 1989 Down). Nonspecific editing appears to prevent extensively modified transcripts from leaving the nucleus (KUMAR and CARMICHAEL 1997 Down) and has been hypothesized as a defense against dsRNA viruses (BASS and WEINTRAUB 1988 Down). Specific editing, the conversion of single or limited numbers of adenosines to inosine, is catalyzed by one or more of the known editases (MELCHER et al. 1996A Down, MELCHER et al. 1996B Down; BASS et al. 1997 Down). It has been demonstrated that specific editing has a profound role in regulating protein function (KOHLER et al. 1993 Down; BRUSA et al. 1995 Down; BURNS et al. 1997 Down; PATTON et al. 1997 Down). For example, glutamate receptor (GluR) channel kinetics are modified by editing of the R/G site, resulting in faster recovery from desensitization, while editing of the GluR Q/R site renders the edited channel impermeable to Ca2+ (LOMELI et al. 1994 Down; BRUSA et al. 1995 Down). Genetic studies of the GluR Q/R site underscore the importance of a single editing site: when editing at the Q/R site was abolished in a single allele the resulting heterozygous mice displayed seizures and died by 3 wk of age (BRUSA et al. 1995 Down).

Considering the existence of several different mammalian editases and editase activity across phyla, the number of known targets of A-to-I editing is suspiciously low. The most extensively studied examples of specific editing are the GluR subunit genes and hepatitis delta virus (HDV) antigenomic editing (CASEY and GERIN 1995 Down). Several new substrates for RNA editases have been described recently, including the mammalian serotonin 2C receptor (5HT2CR; BURNS et al. 1997 Down), the squid potassium channel (sqKv2; PATTON et al. 1997 Down), and Xenopus basic fibroblast growth factor (SACCOMANNO and BASS 1999 Down). Although only a limited number of RNA-editing substrates are currently known, a recent technique that identifies inosine-containing transcripts in Caenorhabditis elegans may eliminate the serendipitous nature currently associated with detection of RNA-editing sites (MORSE and BASS 1997 Down, MORSE and BASS 1999 Down).

Mechanistically, the editing of pre-mRNA appears to require the formation of stable, highly base-paired RNA secondary structures. Whereas nonspecific editing requires extended regions of complementary duplex dsRNA (NISHIKURA et al. 1991 Down), specific editing appears to require more complex RNA secondary structures (EGEBJERG et al. 1994 Down; HURST et al. 1995 Down; HERB et al. 1996 Down; MAAS et al. 1996 Down). These secondary structures include a sequence called an editing site complementary sequence (ECS) found in downstream introns (HIGUCHI et al. 1993 Down). Even though there may be numerous bulges, hairpins, and loops within the intervening secondary structure, the ECS and exon form an extended, energetically stable duplex RNA around the adenosines that undergo modification (EGEBJERG et al. 1994 Down).

Editing activity has been assayed in Drosophila embryonic nuclear extracts (CASEY and GERIN 1995 Down), but the only reports of RNA editing in Drosophila have been for the 4f-RNP gene (PETSCHEK et al. 1997 Down), the Dmca1A calcium channel gene (SMITH et al. 1996 Down), and the chloride channel subunit (SEMENOV and PAK 1999 Down). However, little is known about the mechanism, overall degree of editing, or developmental regulation of editing in these transcripts, and definitive proof of RNA editing vs. other possible explanations for transcript variability remains to be provided. We have discovered four editing sites in para transcripts, which encodes the major Na+ channel of the nervous system. Interestingly, MLE, a dsRNA helicase, appears to be involved in the editing process at one of the editing sites in the para transcript (REENAN et al. 2000 Down). In this article, we describe the remaining three A-to-I RNA editing sites found in para, as well as their developmental regulation and evolutionary conservation. In addition, we provide strong evidence for an ECS-based mechanism involving RNA secondary structures acting at these sites.


*  MATERIALS AND METHODS
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Preparation of RNA and genomic DNA:
Whole RNA was prepared from four developmental stages of Drosophila melanogaster, as well as from D. melanogaster and D. virilis adults, by the LiCl/urea method and stored in ethanol at -80° (AUFFRAY and ROUGEON 1980 Down). Genomic DNA from adult D. virilis and D. melanogaster was prepared by homogenizing 100 adult flies and extracting the DNA with the Wizard genomic DNA purification kit (Promega, Madison, WI).

Reverse transcription-PCR:
Reverse transcription (RT)-PCR reactions were performed as described by the manufacturer using MMLV-RT (GIBCO BRL, Gaithersburg, MD) and the addition of RNasin (Promega). Standard hot start PCR reactions were performed with cDNA from the RT reaction or genomic DNA as template. Using a Robocycler (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA), 40 cycles of PCR were performed with the following parameters: denaturation at 94° for 45 sec, annealing at 55° for 45 sec, and extension at 72° for variable intervals depending on the expected size of the product. When the PCR product was presumed to be >1.5 kb, Ex Taq (Takara) polymerase was used for reactions, which were performed as indicated by the manufacturer. All reactions were 50 µl total volume.

Preparation and cloning of PCR products:
After phenol-chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation, PCR products were cut with restriction enzymes for ligation. Cut products were gel purified and ligated into the pBluescript SK+ vector (Stratagene). Plasmids were transformed into XL1-Blue cells (Stratagene) and isolated by the alkaline lysis miniprep protocol (AUSUBEL 1987 Down). Restriction enzyme digests were performed to determine the editing status of each clone.

Genomic and cDNA sequence:
Colonies that contained insert DNA to be sequenced were replated on LB agarose with ampicillin. DNA was purified with the Wizard Plus miniprep DNA system (Promega) according to the manufacturer's directions. Sequencing was performed on an ABI automated sequencer (University of Connecticut Health Center Core Facility) and data were analyzed using the ABI Seqed program.

Evolutionary comparison and RNA secondary structure predictions:
Genomic DNA was sequenced for regions of D. melanogaster and D. virilis. Sequences were aligned and compared in overlapping 50-bp increments. Subsequently, RNA secondary structures were predicted using the mfold program of the Wisconsin GCG software. The "forc" function of the mfold program was used to force base pairing of the Fsp site for comparison between D. melanogaster and D. virilis. LoopDloop version 1.2a63 by D. G. Gilbert (1992) was used to convert mfold data into printable structures.

Generation of trangenic Drosophila:
The primers Splt1 and XAFP were used to amplify the genomic region of the FSP editing site by PCR. These primers generate an amplification product that, when digested with EcoRI and XbaI, includes 1472 bp upstream of the edited adenosine extending through 178 bp downstream of the edited adenosine. The PCR products were subcloned into pBluescript (Stratagene) and subjected to sequencing. Sequence-confirmed clones from this region were then cloned into pCasPeR-hs (obtained from C. Thummel, University of Utah) cut with EcoRI and XbaI. These constructs were grown in Escherichia coli XL1-blue (Stratagene) and subjected to QIAprep plasmid purification (QIAGEN, Chatsworth, CA). Constructs were then injected into embryos from a transposase overproducer and w+ progeny were obtained via standard transformation procedures (PARK and LIM 1995 Down). For detection of transcripts from the FSP transgene, the RTHS primer was used in first-strand cDNA synthesis and PCR was performed using the HSKn and FSPnot primers. Products were subjected to restriction enzyme analysis with BanII or directly sequenced using the FSP-S primer. Cognate para cDNAs were amplified using the PRP8 primer in first-strand cDNA synthesis and the FSPnot and FASP primers for PCR.

Oligonucleotides:
RT primers were LR1, 5'-TCGTGTTGACCACAATGCACAGCG-3', or PRP8, 5'-CGCGAAGAGCAGTGTCCG-3'. Fsp site cDNA primers for both D. melanogaster and D. virilis were Fsp-S, 5'-CCGAGCTCGTATGACGAATTGCAAAGG-3', and Fsp-B, 5'-CGGATCCTGATATGTTGACAATACC-3'. Fsp i-a- and i-a+ splice-form-specific primers were Fa-Mim, 5'-CGGATCCGTTCCGTATCGTGTACGACTCC-3', and Fa-Pim, 5'-CGGGATCCAGGTAAGGATAAGGATGTCGACT-3', respectively, replacing Fsp-B for cDNA amplification. Ssp and Sfc site cDNA primers for D. melanogaster were Pore11, 5'-CCGAGCTCCTTGGTCTTGGAATGGC-3', and Pore12, 5'-CGGATCCATAATGGGTGTACAGC-3'. For D. virilis, Sfc-S, 5'-CCGAGCTCAAAGACTATTGCTTGTGGTCGC-3', replaced Pore11. The intron upstream of the Fsp site was amplified with Fsp-S and either Feds (D. melanogaster), 5'-CGGGATCCGTTGCCCTTCTCGCCGCC-3', or Fups-B (D. virilis), 5'-CGGGATCCGACTCCGACTCCACCTCGAC-3'. The intron downstream of the Ssp site was amplified with Pore12 and Ssp-S, 5'-CCGAGCTCGTGGCTGAGCTTCGTGCC-3'. The intron upstream of the Sfc site was amplified using SUFR-1, 5'-CGGAGCTCGGTAACGCGTATCTGTGCC-3', and SUFR-2, 5'-CGGGATCCACCAATGAACAGATTGAGTGTG. The intron downstream of the Sfc site was cloned using Sfc-S and Sfc-B, 5'-CGGATCCTTAGAAATGTTCATGACAG-3'.

  • XAFP, 5'-GCTCTAGACGACTCCGACTCCACCTCGAC-3'.

  • Splt1, 5'-GGAATTCTGACACAGGACTTCTGGGAG-3'.

  • RTHS, 5'-CATGTATATAGATACTAATGTATCG-3'.

  • HSKn, 5'-GGGGTACCCATTGATGAACAAAAATTAGAC-3'.

  • FSPnot, 5'-ATAAGAATGCGGCCGCGAATTTGATTTTGGCCATTGTTGCC-3'.

  • FASP, 5'-CGGATCCACGTCCGTTCCGTATCGTG-3'.


*  RESULTS
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

We have identified a total of four A-to-I RNA-editing sites within Drosophila para transcripts, three of which are described in detail here (Fig 1). The editing sites are named for restriction enzyme recognition sequences that are either generated or abolished by RNA editing. For instance, the SfcI site contains the sequence ctataa in genomic DNA but edited cDNAs have the sequence ctatag, which generates a SfcI site. These sites were originally discovered through sequence analysis of cDNAs that were subsequently compared with genomic DNA from D. melanogaster and D. simulans. It is estimated that these two sibling species are separated by 2.5 million years of divergence (POWELL 1997 Down). In each case, adenosine (A) was observed in the genomic sequence with guanosine (G) at the corresponding position in numerous cDNAs.



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Figure 1. Structural representation of the para sodium channel with editing sites indicated. The sodium channel is composed of four homology domains (I–IV), each with six transmembrane segments (S1–S6). The Fsp site is located within the first cytoplasmic domain between homology domains I and II. The Ssp site is contained within the first 10 base pairs of the extracellular loop between S5 and S6 in homology domain III. The Sfc site is located in the third cytoplasmic loop between homology domains III and IV.

We postulated that if editing of para transcripts is biologically important for Na+ channel function in Drosophila, it should be evolutionarily conserved among distant relatives of D. melanogaster. The frequency of editing at each site in adult D. melanogaster was determined for a number of independent cDNAs via restriction enzyme analysis (Table 1). The frequency of editing varied among the three sites: the frequency of editing was 68 ± 3% at the Fsp site, 43 ± 5% at the Sfc site, and 21 ± 2% at the Ssp site. We compared editing at these sites in D. melanogaster with the corresponding regions in D. virilis. It is estimated that these two species diverged from 61 to 65 million years ago (BEVERLEY and WILSON 1984 Down). The frequency of editing in adult D. virilis was increased slightly at the Ssp site whereas the Sfc site showed a slight decrease with respect to D. melanogaster (Table 1). In contrast, editing at the Fsp site was not detectable at all in D. virilis. This suggests that editing has been conserved for only two of the three sites.


 
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Table 1. Frequency of editing in adult flies

Editing of specific sites occurs independently:
Two of the editing sites (Ssp and Sfc) are separated by 2000 bp and two introns in pre-mRNA (see Fig 3). We hypothesized that editing of these sites might not occur independently. That is, the editing of the two sites might be mutually exclusive or interdependent. To examine this, we cloned RT-PCR products that encompass both the Ssp and Sfc sites and determined the editing status for each (Table 2). A total of 131 cDNAs were analyzed for editing at both sites. Using Fisher's exact test, editing at the Ssp and Sfc sites was determined to be independent despite their proximity (P < 0.001; SOKAL and ROHLF 1981 Down). We conclude that editing at the Ssp or Sfc sites occurs independently of the editing status of the other site.



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Figure 2. (A) Frequency of editing at Ssp and Sfc sites during development of D. melanogaster. RNA was isolated from each developmental time point and used for RT-PCR. The RT-PCR products were cloned and analyzed using SspI (open bars) or SfcI (solid bars) restriction enzymes to detect editing at each specific site. For each site and each developmental time point, the number of individual clones analyzed ranged from 131 to 165. {ddagger}, Statistically significant when compared to adult (Student's paired t test); {infty}, statistically significant when compared to pupae (Student's paired t test). (B) Frequency of editing at the Fsp site throughout development. RNA was isolated from each developmental stage and utilized for RT-PCR. Products were cloned and analyzed by cutting with FspI. For each site and each developmental time point, the number of individual clones analyzed ranged from 112 to 168. §, Statistically significant when compared to third instar larvae, pupae, and adult (Student's paired t test).



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Figure 3. Sequence identity profile of intronic sequence downstream of the Ssp and Sfc sites. D. melanogaster sequence data generated from genomic region surrounding the Ssp and Sfc sites were compared to the orthologous region in D. virilis. The sequence homology was computed by comparing 50-bp overlapping regions after comparative alignment using Seqed 1.03 (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA). The pre-mRNA transcript is depicted above the profile. Boxes indicate exonic sequence, while lines connecting the exons represent splicing of introns. Ssp (first exon) and Sfc (third exon) editing sites are depicted as asterisks. Striped boxes represent putative ECSs.


 
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Table 2. Independence of editing at Ssp and Sfc sites

Alternative splicing decisions do not affect RNA editing:
Alternatively spliced exons are present at several different locations throughout the para transcript resulting in the potential to encode at least 192 Na+ channel isoforms in D. melanogaster and at least 128 in D. virilis (THACKERAY and GANETZKY 1995 Down). RNA editing further increases transcript diversity of para. However, since both processes may require conserved intronic elements, alternative splicing decisions may influence editing or vice versa. We hypothesized that certain splice forms might be preferentially edited at the Fsp site, which lies 200 bp upstream of an intron involved in the alternative splicing of exons i and a (O'DOWD et al. 1995 Down; THACKERAY and GANETZKY 1995 Down). For example, exon-i-containing splice forms may be edited significantly more than splice forms lacking exon i. Using chi-square analysis for goodness of fit, we found no preference for editing of any splice form near the Fsp editing site regardless of splice form abundance (Table 3). These results suggest that specific editing occurs independently of alternative splicing at the Fsp site.


 
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Table 3. Editing of para splice forms

Editing of para occurs in two developmentally regulated patterns:
To determine whether editing of the para transcript is developmentally regulated as is editing of GluR transcripts (LOMELI et al. 1994 Down), we analyzed para cDNAs representing transcripts from each stage of development. The Ssp and Sfc sites show only minimal editing (1–2% of cDNAs) at all stages from embryos through the third larval instar. However, a dramatic 20- to 40-fold increase in editing of the Ssp and Sfc sites occurs at pupation, with the frequency of editing approaching adult levels (Fig 2A). The Fsp site showed a different pattern of editing during development, exhibiting higher starting levels in the embryo (15%), and increasing less than fourfold during the pupal stage to adult levels (Fig 2B). Thus, specific editing at the three sites in the para transcript examined here is developmentally regulated.

Evolutionary comparisons reveal putative ECS elements within introns downstream of the Ssp and Sfc sites:
If A-to-I editing were occurring in para transcripts via a mechanism analogous to that for mammalian GluR transcripts, we hypothesized that each editing site would have a corresponding ECS within the downstream intron (HIGUCHI et al. 1993 Down; EGEBJERG et al. 1994 Down; HERB et al. 1996 Down). It has been shown previously that exonic regions of para are highly conserved between D. melanogaster and D. virilis, whereas intronic regions are divergent (THACKERAY and GANETZKY 1995 Down). Therefore, if an intron contains within it an ECS complementary to a conserved editing site, this should be apparent as a conserved sequence surrounded by a highly divergent flanking intronic sequence.

Because editing at the Ssp and Sfc sites was conserved between D. melanogaster and D. virilis (Table 1), intronic regions surrounding these sites were cloned and sequenced in these two species. We generated an identity profile based on aligned sequences (Fig 3). As expected, exonic regions were nearly identical, whereas intronic sequences varied considerably, generally exhibiting <50% identity. However, we discovered regions of high sequence identity between D. melanogaster and D. virilis within the introns downstream from each editing site. For the Ssp site, a 40-bp region located 240 bp downstream of the exon-intron boundary was identical in the two species. For the Sfc site, a stretch of 62 bp found 1036 bp downstream of the exon-intron boundary was nearly identical (61/62 nucleotides) between D. melanogaster and D. virilis. On the basis of their conservation and location, these two intronic regions appear to be good candidates for ECSs. Moreover, a preliminary analysis reveals that these regions of conservation are complementary to the sequences surrounding the exonic editing sites and are thus capable of forming base-paired duplexes in this region, the essential feature of an ECS (data not shown).

RNA secondary structure predictions indicate base pairing between editing sites and putative ECSs:
In addition to an ECS, editing of mammalian GluR transcripts requires formation of an extended RNA secondary structure that aligns the distant ECS with the region encompassing the edited adenosine (HIGUCHI et al. 1993 Down; EGEBJERG et al. 1994 Down; LOMELI et al. 1994 Down; HERB et al. 1996 Down). To determine whether the putative ECSs would be capable of base pairing with their respective exonic counterparts in the context of a larger RNA secondary, we used a computer program to generate secondary structures in these regions for the para pre-mRNA sequence (ZUKER 1989 Down). For the Ssp site, the predicted secondary structures for both species appear strikingly similar despite the divergence of intron sequences (Fig 4). For instance, they each have an extended repeat capable of forming a hairpin of duplex RNA <=24 bp long. Both structures also contain a large A-rich loop (60–70% adenosines over 53 or 73 nucleotides in melanogaster and virilis, respectively). However, the most striking aspect of these structures involves the specifically edited adenosine at the Ssp site. It is contained within a relatively long region of duplex RNA in which the editing site base pairs with the 40-bp conserved intronic segment, confirming its identity as an ECS. For the Sfc site, the predicted structure in D. virilis also juxtaposes the editing site with the predicted ECS. However, a similar structure was not predicted when the D. melanogaster sequence was used in this analysis. Nonetheless, when base-paired structures are generated by manually aligning the putative ECS and editing site, identical local structures are predicted for both D. virilis and D. melanogaster. Moreover, these local structures resemble those formed in edited mammalian transcripts (Fig 5). In addition, it is clear that the sequences outside of the ECS/exon base-pairing regions are under less constraint. We conclude that the conserved intronic elements are ECSs and that they are necessary to direct editing by forming duplex RNA substrates for dsRNA editases within larger energetically stable RNA secondary structures.



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Figure 4. Comparison of putative RNA secondary structures for the Ssp site in para orthologues. The RNA secondary structure program in the GCG software package predicted secondary structures from the D. melanogaster or D. virilis genomic sequence downstream of the Ssp editing site. The two structures are similar in their overall appearance. They both have long regions of duplex RNA and bulges and loops that are in similar positions. Most importantly, the predicted ECS (uppercase letters; see Fig 3) base pairs with the exonic region containing the editing site. The boldface lines indicate the location of the intron-exon boundaries.



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Figure 5. Local RNA secondary structures predicted for the Sfc site. Exonic sequence is depicted in lowercase with boldface type. Uppercase letters indicate intronic ECS sequences. Local structures indicating exon-ECS base pairing for D. melanogaster and D. virilis Sfc sites. The adenosine to be edited is shown in white. The donor site for the downstream intron (not shown) is located 55 nucleotides 3' to the edited adenosine. The number of intervening bases are indicated in the looped-out region.

Editing of the Fsp site occurs in D. melanogaster, but not in D. virilis:
In contrast with editing at the Ssp and Sfc sites, which is conserved between D. melanogaster and D. virilis, editing at the Fsp site appears to occur only in D. melanogaster (Table 1). To examine this region in more detail we cloned and sequenced genomic DNA flanking this editing site from both species, including a nearby upstream intron (THACKERAY and GANETZKY 1995 Down). We were unable to find any intronic regions that were highly conserved between the two species. Because the Fsp site is edited in D. melanogaster, we predicted that this would require an ECS as for the other edited sites. The upstream intron is only 58 bp from the Fsp site and we examined the possibility that it or the exon itself contained the corresponding ECS. Computer-generated RNA secondary structures using the D. melanogaster sequence predicted formation of a stable RNA duplex in the Fsp region (Fig 6A). Surprisingly, the adenosine to be edited in the melanogaster sequence is predicted to lie within an extended hairpin that forms entirely from exonic sequences. Nonetheless, the predicted local RNA secondary structure for the Fsp site compares favorably with other known editing sites (Fig 6C). If editing at the Fsp site also occurred in D. virilis, an RNA secondary structure analogous to that in melanogaster would be expected for the corresponding virilis sequence. To test this possibility, we attempted to generate the analogous structure in D. virilis (see MATERIALS AND METHODS) and obtained a structure that differs markedly from the structure observed in D. melanogaster, consistent with our failure to find editing of the Fsp site in D. virilis (Fig 6A and Fig B). The computed free energies for the two structures differ (D. melanogaster = -1620 kcal/mol vs. D. virilis = -538 kcal/mol), with the D. melanogaster structure predicted to form a much more stable structure. Furthermore, we generated local structures using a pairwise alignment of the sequence surrounding the edited adenosine. Even using these local comparisons, the D. virilis structure was less stable compared with the melanogaster structure (Fig 6C). These RNA secondary structure predictions are consistent with the lack of conservation of RNA editing at the Fsp site.



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Figure 6. RNA secondary structures generated near the Fsp editing site. (A) RNA secondary structure predicted for D. melanogaster by the mfold program (GCG software). Note the extensive regions of duplex RNA and the location of the Fsp site within an extended hairpin. The intron-exon boundary is indicated. Shaded regions indicate base pairs that were forced to occur with the mfold "forc" function for comparison of D. melanogaster and D. virilis sequence. (B) RNA secondary structure formed when boxed base pairs from Fig 6A were forced to occur with D. virilis sequence. (C) Local RNA secondary structure comparison of Fsp in D. melanogaster and D. virilis, as well as to other known A-to-I RNA-editing sites. Adenosines that are edited are shown in white.

Predicted sequences are capable of directing RNA editing of the FSP site in vivo:
A valid test of RNA secondary structure predictions would be to assay RNA editing on substrates removed from the context of the entire para primary transcript. To this end, we generated transgenic flies via germline transformation capable of expressing an FSP editing site minimal construct. We subcloned the region of the FSP site genomic DNA shown in Fig 7A into a heat-shock-inducible transformation vector and obtained numerous stable transgenic fly lines. Since the transgene contains the intron upstream of the edited exon as well as part of the upstream exon, we were able to monitor processing of the transgene by the splicing. The FSP transgene produced transcripts in which the intron was removed efficiently under noninduced conditions. By restriction analysis of RT-PCR product from numerous transgenic lines, we observed efficient RNA editing of the FSP transgene in all lines (Fig 7B). Direct sequence analysis of RT-PCR products of both cognate para and transgene transcripts revealed that the transgene is edited faithfully and specifically; only the single adenosine is edited in both para and transgene products (data not shown). Thus, all the sequences necessary to direct RNA editing at the FSP editing site are contained within the transgene, which includes all the sequences shown in the predicted structure (Fig 6A).



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Figure 7. Transgenic analysis of FSP site RNA editing. (A) Depiction of sequences included in the FSP transgene. Open boxes indicate 5' and 3' hsp70 noncoding regions. Shaded boxes indicate para exons. Boldface line indicates para intron sequence. Bracket above transgene construct indicates extent of sequence shown in the predicted FSP site secondary structure (Fig 6A). White asterisk indicates location of the FSP editing site and circled B indicates the BanII restriction site generated by RNA editing. Solid bar indicates location of proposed exonic ECS. Splicing of transgene is as indicated. (B) RT-PCR analysis of para and transgene editing. Editing was assayed by restriction analysis with the enzyme BanII. The BanII restriction site GRGCYC is generated by editing with the underlined G corresponding to the edited adenosine. Lane 1, transgene RT-PCR product; lane 2, transgene RT-PCR product digested with BanII; lane 3, para RT-PCR product digested with BanII; lane 4, para RT-PCR product. Extra products seen in lanes 3 and 4 correspond to alternative splicing that occurs in para (±exon a). Dots indicate positions of BanII restriction products, indicative of RNA editing.


*  DISCUSSION
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

RNA editing is a mechanism for diversifying the protein products encoded by a given gene. Despite the ubiquitous presence of editase activity, the number of known targets is limited. We report here three A-to-I RNA-editing sites in para sodium channel transcripts of Drosophila. A large number of independent cDNAs revealed identical modifications, whereas such changes were never observed in genomic DNA, eliminating other possibilities such as the presence of allelic polymorphisms or polymerase errors. Characterization of editing frequencies in adult flies, as well as the developmental regulation, evolutionary conservation, and predicted RNA secondary structures are all consistent with the process of A-to-I RNA editing.

Flanking sequences near the para editing sites support editing by an ADAR-based mechanism. The 5' nucleotide neighboring each edited adenosine is consistent with editase preferences described by POLSON and BASS 1994 Down(A = T -> C -> G). That is, two of the sites (Ssp and Sfc) have the most preferred 5' neighbor, an adenosine, while the third site (Fsp) has a 5' cytosine. None of the sites have the least preferred 5' neighbor, a guanosine. Also, duplex formation surrounding the editing sites conforms to editing structures described for other known A-to-I RNA-editing sites. The Ssp and Sfc editing site adenosines base pair with uracil (Fig 4 and Fig 5B), which occurs with the GluR-B Q/R site (Fig 6C; HIGUCHI et al. 1993 Down). However, there is no absolute requirement that the edited adenosine be base paired; in fact, the adenosines edited in GluR-5 and GluR-6 Q/R sites are present within a small bubble (HERB et al. 1996 Down). In vitro experiments have demonstrated that the local duplex affects the efficiency of editing. Introduction of a cytosine opposite the edited adenosine in the GluR Q/R sites increases the efficiency of modification by recombinant ADAR1 (HERB et al. 1996 Down; MAAS et al. 1996 Down), while introduction of guanosine opposite the GluR-B Q/R editing site does not (HIGUCHI et al. 1993 Down). Interestingly, the Fsp adenosine, which is edited at the highest frequency of any para editing site, forms a mismatch with cytosine similar to the GluR R/G and HDV sites (Fig 6C; LOMELI et al. 1994 Down; CASEY and GERIN 1995 Down). These observations are consistent with a Drosophila ADAR activity mediating editing of these sites.

Initially, the location of one editing site suggested experiments that might reveal a correlation between editing and alternative splicing. The Fsp site is upstream of alternatively spliced exons. We suspected that the Fsp site might be edited more frequently in one splice form than another. This hypothesis proved unsubstantiated by experimental evidence (Table 3).

Although the Ssp and Sfc sites are 2000 bp apart in pre-mRNAs, analysis of a large number of cDNAs (n = 131) spanning both of these editing sites revealed that editing occurred independently (Table 2). One interpretation of this result is that the editing activity is present in all tissues in which para is expressed and the sites themselves determine the intrinsic level of modification independently of one another. Another interpretation is that these sites are edited in a spatially regulated manner. In this model, some tissues would perform one edit, while some perform both in a manner that mimics expected ratios. This could be accomplished by multiple editases or isoforms, each editing a different site in a spatially distinct manner.

Developmental regulation:
The presence of three unique editing sites has allowed us to compare the regulation of editing during development. Two of the sites (Ssp and Sfc) appear to be tightly regulated in a similar manner, while the third site (Fsp) has a different editing profile (Fig 2A and Fig B). There are several possible interpretations of these observations. First, there could be different accessory factors involved in the editing of each site. In the case of the Fsp site, which is edited throughout development, either no additional regulatory factors would be required or they would be constitutively expressed. In contrast, the Ssp and Sfc sites would require accessory factors or the accessory factor expression would be induced during pupation. Alternatively, a repressor of RNA editing that acts at these sites specifically may be expressed early in development. Second, different enzymes or isoforms may recognize different secondary structures. In this case, editing at the Fsp site involves an enzyme that recognizes its limited secondary structure, while the Ssp and Sfc sites might utilize an enzyme whose binding and activity requires more extensive secondary structures. The different enzymes may have tissue-specific distributions that would add further diversification to the expression of edited proteins.

Evolutionary comparisons:
Evolutionary conservation of the Ssp and Sfc sites suggests that A-to-I RNA editing of the para transcript provides a selective advantage to the organism. Evolutionarily conserved intronic elements that maintain significant complementarity to exonic sequences containing the Ssp and Sfc editing sites further support this conclusion. In contrast, the lack of conservation of a cis-element for the Fsp site correlates with the absence of editing in D. virilis. This correlation is further strengthened when the estimated 61–65 million years of divergence between the two species is considered (BEVERLEY and WILSON 1984 Down). In addition, the Fsp editing site occurs in one of the least conserved portions of the para protein (R. REENAN, unpublished observation) and thus the absence of RNA editing in this region in D. virilis may simply reflect reduced selective constraints in this region of the protein.

An evolutionary comparison of editing frequencies in adult flies is intriguing. At the Ssp site the editing frequency is similar between D. melanogaster and D. virilis, while the editing frequency at the Sfc site is slightly higher in D. melanogaster. These data may reflect intronic sequence differences that would alter the RNA secondary structure of editing site substrates. The similarity of predicted RNA secondary structures, both globally and locally, for the Ssp site is consistent with similar editing frequencies. For the Sfc site, the large size of the intron downstream of the Sfc site, without significant selective pressures, provides ample opportunity for sequence changes that may alter RNA secondary structure or even tertiary interactions, which could affect the efficiency of editing (HIGUCHI et al. 1993 Down). Despite differences in editing efficiencies, evolutionary conservation of A-to-I RNA editing itself is significant. Conservation of necessary structural elements would have required many compensatory mutations, as the intronic sequences are highly divergent.

The length of intronic sequences that compose the conserved ECS in the Sfc (65 bp with one difference) and Ssp (40 bp of identity) sites are notable. Aside from these areas of conservation, intronic sequences were only 40–60% conserved between melanogaster and virilis. Several known genes contain conserved intronic sequence corresponding to homeodomain protein binding sites or expression enhancers (LOU et al. 1995 Down; HAERRY and GEHRING 1996 Down, HAERRY and GEHRING 1997 Down; KEEGAN et al. 1997 Down; HAUCK et al. 1999 Down). However, these "conserved sequences" include multiple differences, have identical stretches of <30 bp of identity, and often contain repeated sequences. Extensive studies of alternative splicing (PAUL BINGHAM, personal communication) indicate that conserved intronic regions of >30 bp are rare. Most importantly, the conserved candidate ECSs are capable of forming extended imperfect duplexes with the regions of the edited adenosines and these local structures resemble the structure of known ADAR substrates (Fig 4 Fig 5 Fig 6). It has been shown for vertebrate GluR-R/G sites that the most highly conserved nucleotides in the editing site are those participating in base pairing interactions within the hairpin known to be important for RNA editing (ARUSCAVAGE and BASS 2000 Down). In all cases presented here, the para editing site/ECS pairings predicted are almost completely conserved including mismatched pairs and bulges. In addition, a recent study of ADAR1 shows that an important determinant of ADAR specificity may be the presence of nearby loops or bulges that act as helix ends (LEHMANN and BASS 1999 Down). The presence of such helical defects in one defined substrate was shown to limit ADAR1 activity to certain A residues in a substrate that would otherwise be edited more extensively. Such helical defects are present in all the para substrates predicted in this study and may serve the purpose of positioning a Drosophila ADAR in a manner similar to that seen for ADAR1. These criteria make these conserved sequences excellent candidates for ECSs, not only by definition, and taken together suggest that we have predicted energetically favorable RNA secondary structures that are utilized for A-to-I RNA editing of para.

In addition, for the FSP site, we have shown that RNA editing of a minimal substrate occurs in vivo. The transgene that was constructed in this instance contains the predicted secondary structure and some additional upstream intron and exon sequences (Fig 7). Interestingly, for this editing site, a contrast is seen with all other known editing sites. While all other reported mammalian ion channel editing sites require downstream intronic ECSs, the FSP editing construct contains no downstream intron sequences. In fact, while the predicted ECS for the FSP site is downstream, it lies entirely within the coding region of the same exon as the edited adenosines. Efficient editing of the transgene supports the predicted secondary structure and shows that no downstream intronic sequences are necessary. Moreover, the absence of RNA editing in D. virilis is also supported by this evidence since a similar secondary structure for this species is predicted to differ significantly from the predicted D. melanogaster structure. In particular, changes are predicted in exactly the region of the virilis structure near the edited adenosines and similar changes at known sites of RNA editing have been shown to disrupt RNA editing in vitro.

Functional significance:
Our discovery of RNA editing of a Na+ channel transcript follows the trend of A-to-I edited ligand- and voltage-gated ion channels including the first and most extensively studied GluR subunits, the serotonin receptor 2C, and the squid K+ channel (HIGUCHI et al. 1993 Down; KOHLER et al. 1993 Down; BURNS et al. 1997 Down; PATTON et al. 1997 Down). In contrast with these other edited channels, the functional significance of para editing must be inferred. Evolutionary conservation of para editing suggests that Ssp and Sfc editing sites are biologically important. The Sfc site is edited in both D. melanogaster and D. virilis and has also been observed in Musca domestica (R. REENAN, unpublished observation).

The functional consequences of all three editing sites are intriguing considering the structural properties of the Na+ channel. First, the Fsp site is contained within the first cytoplasmic domain, which is known to contain several PKA phosphorylation sites (MURPHY et al. 1996 Down; SMITH and GOLDIN 1996 Down, SMITH and GOLDIN 1997 Down). Although the Fsp site itself does not create or abolish a phosphorylation site, the charge change introduced by editing (Q-to-R) may affect regulation by phosphorylation. Histidine is encoded by the D. virilis genome at this position. Thus, in D. virilis, this position may be positively charged depending on local pH. In D. melanogaster, editing changes the coding potential from an uncharged Q to a positively charged R residue, which may be functionally equivalent to the D. virilis encoded histidine. Second, the Sfc site is contained within a short cytoplasmic linker between homology domains III and IV, a region known to be important for inactivation of the Na+ channel. More importantly, the edited Sfc site introduces the serine (N-to-S) of a consensus PKC phosphorylation site (KEMP and PEARSON 1990 Down; KENNELLY and KREBS 1991 Down). The functional changes introduced by phosphorylation of this region have been studied in rat brain Na+ channels. For example, phosphorylation of a protein kinase C (PKC) site, whose serine is seven amino acids from the Sfc serine in para, is required to slow inactivation of the Na+ channel (NUMANN et al. 1991 Down; WEST et al. 1991 Down). In addition, this PKC phosphorylation site is required for reduction in peak sodium currents induced by cAMP (LI et al. 1993 Down). The addition of a second PKC phosphorylation site by RNA editing of the Sfc site may prolong the slow inactivation associated with phosphorylation at the adjacent genomic encoded site.

We have documented the existence, evolutionary conservation, and developmental regulation of editing at three sites in para. More important, we can now use the power of Drosophila genetics for in vivo analysis of editing substrates as well as temporal and spatial analysis of editing.


*  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank the following for helpful discussions and comments on the manuscript: Stephen Helfand, Jo Jack, Blanka Rogina, Barry Hoopengardner, and Lee Smith. This work was supported by Donaghue Medical Research Foundation and National Science Foundation grant 9728737 to R.R. and National Institutes of Health grants NS15390 and GM43100 to B.G.

Manuscript received January 6, 2000; Accepted for publication March 6, 2000.


*  LITERATURE CITED
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

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