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is an obligate human parasite of the phylum Apicomplexa and is the causative agent of the most lethal form of human malaria. Although N6-methyladenosine modification is thought to be one of the major post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms for stage-specific gene expression in apicomplexan parasites, the precise base position of m6A in mRNAs or noncoding RNAs in these parasites remains unknown. Here, we report global nucleotide-resolution mapping of m6A residues in using DART-seq technology, which quantitatively displayed a stage-specific, dynamic distribution pattern with enrichment near mRNA 3' ends. In this process we identified 894, 788, and 1,762 m6A-modified genes in Ring, Trophozoite and Schizont stages respectively, with an average of 5-7 m6A sites per-transcript at the individual gene level. Notably, several genes involved in malaria pathophysiology, such as KAHRP, ETRAMPs, SERA and stress response genes, such as members of Heat Shock Protein (HSP) family are highly enriched in m6A and therefore could be regulated by this RNA modification. Since we observed preferential methylation at the 3' ends of transcripts and because malaria polyadenylation specificity factor PfCPSF30 harbors an m6A reader 'YTH' domain, we reasoned that m6A might play an important role in 3'-end processing of malaria mRNAs. To investigate this, we used two complementary high-throughput RNA 3'-end mapping approaches, which provided an initial framework to explore potential roles of m6A in the regulation of alternative polyadenylation (APA) during malaria development in human hosts.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2025.01.07.631827 | DOI Listing |
Genome structural variants (SVs) comprise a sizable portion of functionally important genetic variation in all organisms; yet, many SVs evade discovery using short reads. While long-read sequencing can find the hidden SVs, the role of SVs in variation in organismal traits remains largely unclear. To address this gap, we investigate the molecular basis of 50 classical phenotypes in 11 strains using highly contiguous genome assemblies generated with Oxford Nanopore long reads.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRedox Biol
August 2025
Department of Biology, Federico II University, 80126, Napoli, Italy. Electronic address:
Oxidative DNA damage, characterized by the prominent lesion 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (8-oxo-dG), is linked to mutagenesis and genome instability. Accurately mapping these lesions with strand specificity and high resolution remains a major challenge, limiting our understanding of damage dynamics during transcription and repair. Here, we introduce a novel, highly sensitive ligation-dependent probe amplification (LPA) method that enables quantitative, strand-specific analysis of 8-oxo-dG and apurinic (AP) sites at single-nucleotide resolution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
August 2025
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.
A large fraction of newly transcribed RNA is degraded in the nucleus, but nuclear mRNA degradation pathways remain largely understudied. The yeast nuclear endoribonuclease Rnt1 has a well-characterized role in the maturation of many ncRNA precursors. However, the scope and consequence of its function in mRNA degradation pathways is much less defined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrief Bioinform
July 2025
National Laboratory on Health, Molecular Diagnostics and Environmental Effects on Chronic-Degenerative Diseases, Faculty of Higher Studies Iztacala, UNAM, Avenida de los Barrios #1, Los Reyes Iztacala, Tlanepantla, 54090, Mexico State, Mexico.
Motivation: Bisulfite sequencing (BS-Seq) enables a comprehensive and detailed analysis of DNA methylation patterns at single-nucleotide resolution. While methylation differences can contribute to various diseases, their sincronous occurrence at distinct loci complicates understanding. Therefore, advanced tools are essential to facilitate the identification and analysis of methylation programs and patterns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBio Protoc
July 2025
National Engineering Research Center for Healthcare Devices & Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Medical Electronic Instruments and Materials, Institute of Biological and Medical Engineering, Guangdong Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, China.
Transcriptional pausing dynamically regulates spatiotemporal gene expression during cellular differentiation, development, and environmental adaptation. Precise measurement of pausing duration, a critical parameter in transcriptional control, has been challenging due to limitations in resolution and confounding factors. We introduce Fast TV-PRO-seq, an optimized protocol built on time-variant precision run-on sequencing (TV-PRO-seq), which enables genome-wide, single-base resolution mapping of RNA polymerase II pausing times.
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