Genetic regulation of nascent RNA maturation revealed by direct RNA nanopore sequencing

  1. L. Stirling Churchman3
  1. 1Department of Biochemistry and Functional Genomics, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke J1E 4K8, Canada;
  2. 2Research Centre on Aging, CIUSSS de l'Estrie-CHUS, Sherbrooke J1H 2J7, Canada;
  3. 3Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA
  • Corresponding authors: karine.choquet{at}usherbrooke.ca, churchman{at}genetics.med.harvard.edu
  • Abstract

    Quantitative trait loci analyses have revealed an important role for genetic variants in regulating alternative splicing (AS) and alternative cleavage and polyadenylation (APA) in humans. Yet, these studies are generally performed with mature mRNA, so they report on the outcome rather than the processes of RNA maturation and thus may overlook how variants directly modulate pre-mRNA processing. The order in which the many introns of a human gene are removed can substantially influence AS, while nascent RNA polyadenylation can affect RNA stability and decay. However, how splicing order and poly(A) tail length are regulated by genetic variation has never been explored. Here, we used direct RNA nanopore sequencing to investigate allele-specific pre-mRNA maturation in 12 human lymphoblastoid cell lines. We find frequent splicing order differences between alleles and uncover significant single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-splicing order associations in 17 genes. This includes SNPs located in or near splice sites as well as more distal intronic and exonic SNPs. Moreover, several genes showed allele-specific poly(A) tail lengths, many of which also have a skewed allelic abundance ratio. HLA class I transcripts, which encode proteins that play an essential role in antigen presentation, show the most allele-specific splicing orders, which frequently co-occur with allele-specific AS, APA, or poly(A) tail length differences. Together, our results expose new layers of genetic regulation of pre-mRNA maturation and highlight the power of long-read RNA sequencing for allele-specific analyses.

    Footnotes

    • Received February 28, 2024.
    • Accepted October 31, 2024.

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