Circular RNAs and their interactions with RNA-binding proteins to modulate AD-related neuropathology
Project Number3U01AG072577-04S1
Former Number5U01AG072577-04
Contact PI/Project LeaderZHANG, XIAOLING Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationBOSTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CAMPUS
Description
Abstract Text
SUMMARY
New variants, especially in non-coding regions, are expected to be discovered through the ongoing AD
Sequencing Project (ADSP). This proposal will investigate circular RNAs (circRNAs) and RNA binding
proteins (RBPs) that regulate or are regulated by these circRNAs. Recent genomic studies have
discovered thousands of circRNAs produced from both protein-coding genes and non-coding regions of
the genome via a process known as back-splicing. CircRNAs are more enriched in neuronal tissues and
are often derived from genes specific for neuronal and synaptic function. The discovery of these
circRNAs demands a coordinated investigation of RBPs that interact with the circRNAs. Mutations in and
dysfunction of RBPs are known to be major mechanisms contributing to the pathophysiology in
frontotemporal dementia, ALS and AD. However, the contributions of the circRNA:RBP network to these
disease mechanisms are largely unknown. The novel biology of circRNAs opens an entirely new window
into mechanisms of neurodegeneration in ADRD. CircRNAs could contribute to neurodegeneration by
acting as sponges that sequester miRNA/RBPs away from normal mRNA targets, altering splicing or
expression. RBPs also regulate circRNA production by binding to the flanking intronic sequences of
circRNAs which contain many conserved binding sites of splicing factors/RBPs. Thus, sequestration of
RBPs in protein aggregates could cause dysfunctional regulation of circRNAs. The history of genomics
indicate that discovery of each new nucleotide species expands our understanding of disease
mechanisms. The discovery of circRNA presents a major unexplored avenue of RNA metabolism that
demands investigation. We hypothesize that changes in the levels of circRNAs contributes to the
pathophysiology of ADRD, and that discovery of key circRNAs or circRNA-RBP interactions in
aging human brains could uncover novel biomarkers, disease mechanisms or therapeutic
targets. In this proposal, by leveraging large public and our own RNA-seq data (rRNA-depleted), we will
apply several methods to detect and characterize AD-related circRNAs from multiple human brain
regions, and integrate them with ADSP genetic findings (Aim 1). In Aim 2, aside from discovering AD-
related RBPs from human brain RNA-seq, proteomics and ADSP WES/WGS data, we will leverage the
ENCODE CLIP-seq data for RBP binding to identify putative RBP-circRNA interactions with AD, i.e. AD-
related functional RNA elements. Finally, in Aim 3, we will select the top 10% of the circRNAs (~200) and
RBPs (~150) for further high-throughput functional evaluation with a novel, powerful 3D human organoid
model of ADRD, termed AstAD that exhibits the full range of tau pathology and neurodegeneration. We
anticipate that our integrative analyses of ADSP genetics, circRNA, mRNA, RBP and the high-
throughput AstAD functional screen readouts can help generate testable hypothesis for future molecular
mechanisms experimental design.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative
The discovery of circRNAs opens an entirely new window into mechanisms of neurodegeneration in
Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias (AD/ADRD). This proposal seeks to identify and characterize
disease-linked circRNAs and RNA-binding proteins (RBPs), and functional changes in circRNAs or circRNA-
RBP interactions that modify ADRD neuropathology or neurodegeneration. Successful discovery of key
circRNAs or circRNA-RBP interactions in aging human brains could uncover novel biomarkers, disease
mechanisms, or therapeutic targets to diagnose, mediate, or prevent the progression of AD/ADRD.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
3-DimensionalAgingAlzheimer's disease related dementiaBindingBinding ProteinsBinding SitesBiologyBrainBrain regionCodeDataDiagnosisDiseaseElementsEvaluationExhibitsExperimental DesignsFrontotemporal DementiaFunctional disorderFutureGenesGeneticGenomeGenomicsHumanInvestigationLinkMediatingMessenger RNAMethodsMicroRNAsModelingMolecularMutationNerve DegenerationNeuronsNucleotidesOrganoidsPathologyPoriferaProcessProductionProteinsProteomicsRNA SplicingRNA metabolismRNA-Binding ProteinsRecording of previous eventsRegulationRibosomal RNATissuesUntranslated RNAVariantcircular RNAcrosslinking and immunoprecipitation sequencingneuropathologynovelnovel markerpreventprotein aggregationsynaptic functiontau Proteinstherapeutic targettranscriptome sequencing
No Sub Projects information available for 3U01AG072577-04S1
Publications
Publications are associated with projects, but cannot be identified with any particular year of the project or fiscal year of funding. This is due to the continuous and cumulative nature of knowledge generation across the life of a project and the sometimes long and variable publishing timeline. Similarly, for multi-component projects, publications are associated with the parent core project and not with individual sub-projects.
No Publications available for 3U01AG072577-04S1
Patents
No Patents information available for 3U01AG072577-04S1
Outcomes
The Project Outcomes shown here are displayed verbatim as submitted by the Principal Investigator (PI) for this award. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed are those of the PI and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institutes of Health. NIH has not endorsed the content below.
No Outcomes available for 3U01AG072577-04S1
Clinical Studies
No Clinical Studies information available for 3U01AG072577-04S1
News and More
Related News Releases
No news release information available for 3U01AG072577-04S1
History
No Historical information available for 3U01AG072577-04S1
Similar Projects
No Similar Projects information available for 3U01AG072577-04S1