circRAB3IP modulates cell proliferation by reorganizing gene expression and mRNA processing in a paracrine manner
- Natasa Josipovic1,
- Karoline K Ebbesen2,
- Anne Zirkel3,
- Adi Mackay-Danieli1,
- Christoph Dieterich4,
- Leo Kurian3,
- Thomas B Hansen2 and
- Argyris Papantonis1,5
- 1 University Medical Center Goettingen;
- 2 Aarhus University;
- 3 University of Cologne;
- 4 University Hospital Heidelberg
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: argyris.papantonis{at}med.uni-goettingen.de
Abstract
Circular RNAs are endogenous long-lived and abundant non-coding species. Despite their prevalence, only few circRNAs have been dissected mechanistically to date. Here, we catalogued nascent RNA-enriched circRNAs from primary human cells and functionally assign a role to circRAB3IP in sustaining cellular homeostasis. We combined “omics” and functional experiments to show how circRAB3IP depletion deregulates hundreds of genes, suppresses cell cycle progression, and induces senescence-associated gene expression changes. Conversely, excess circRAB3IP delivered to endothelial cells via extracellular vesicles suffices for accelerating their division. We attribute these effects to an interplay between circRAB3IP and the general splicing factor SF3B1, which can affect transcript variant expression levels of cell cycle-related genes. Together, our findings link the maintenance of cell homeostasis to the presence of a single circRNA.
Keywords
- Received April 5, 2022.
- Accepted August 1, 2022.
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the RNA Society
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