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Completed NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

RNA tools for probing spliceosome dynamics

$2.43M USD

Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES
Recipient Organization Georgetown University
Country United States
Start Date Jan 13, 2021
End Date Dec 31, 2023
Duration 1,082 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10328275
Grant Description

Project Summary/Abstract Alternative splicing is a central mechanism to diversify genetic information on the post-transcriptional level. Advances in sequencing technologies revealed shifts in alternative splicing patterns as key features in a variety of biologically relevant systems including embryo development, the adaptive immune response and cancer

progression. A recent RNAseq study demonstrated that alternative splicing patterns for thousands of transcripts are altered in macrophages infected with Listeria. While proteins and mechanisms involved are not established, a protective cellular response to limit intracellular replication may be a consequence. The central goal of this

proposal is to use this infection model system to gain insights into dynamics of non-coding RNAs and mechanisms of alternative splicing on a single cell level. Intriguingly, it was independently discovered that spliceosome components are transiently sequestered in cytosolic RNA-protein granules called U-bodies during

Listeria infection, suggesting that spatiotemporal sequestration may contribute to alternative splicing regulation. Infection with Listeria and formation of U-bodies are highly heterogeneous both in space and time and ideally must be assessed on a single-cell basis. Fluorescence microscopy offers the possibility for long-term

visualization of tagged proteins and fluorescently labeled pathogens, but robust tools to visualize cellular RNAs are limiting. To enable visualization of non-coding RNAs, a versatile tool to fluorescently label RNA in live cells will be developed (Aim 1). This tool will then be utilized to quantify spatiotemporal dynamics of U-bodies and

simultaneously monitor Listeria replication (Aim 2). Contributions of spliceosome components will be dissected by monitoring RNA dynamics and Listeria replication as spliceosome components will be manipulated experimentally. Lastly, a time resolved quantitative mass spectrometry approach will be used to identify protein

candidates that regulate re-shaping of the alternative splicing landscape (Aim 3). These candidate factors will be further investigated by knockdown and assessing consequences for U-body dynamics and intracellular bacterial replication in the microscopy assay. Together, this study will serve as a unique model system to unravel

alternative splicing regulation on a single cell level in a physiologically relevant model system using fluorescence microscopy.

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Georgetown University

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