ILANIT 2020

m6A modification of a 3′ UTR site reduces RME1 mRNA levels to promote meiosis

Guy Bushkin 1,2 David Pincus 1,2 Jeffrey Morgan 1,3,4 Kris Richardson 1 Caroline Lewis 1 Sze Ham Chan 1 David Bartel 1,3,4 Gerald Fink 1,3
1-, Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, USA
2Department of Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology and the Center for Physics of Evolving Systems, University of Chicago, USA
3Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
4-, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, USA

Despite the vast number of modification sites mapped within mRNAs, known examples of consequential mRNA modifications remain rare. Here, we provide multiple lines of evidence to show that Ime4p, an N6-methyladenosine (m6A) methyltransferase required for meiosis in yeast, acts by methylating a site in the 3′ UTR of the mRNA encoding Rme1p, a transcriptional repressor of meiosis. Consistent with this mechanism, genetic analyses reveal that IME4 functions upstream of RME1. Transcriptome-wide, RME1 is the primary message that displays both increased methylation and reduced expression in an Ime4p-dependent manner. In yeast strains for which IME4 is dispensable for meiosis, a natural polymorphism in the RME1 promoter reduces RME1 transcription, obviating the requirement for methylation. Mutation of a single m6A site in the RME1 3′ UTR increases Rme1p repressor production and reduces meiotic efficiency. These results reveal the molecular and physiological consequences of a modification in the 3′ UTR of an mRNA.









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