The
mRNA encoding this protein is subject to
cytidine to
uridine (C to U) site-specific
RNA editing. ApoB100 and ApoB48 are encoded by the same gene, however, the differences in the translated proteins are not due to alternative splicing but are due to the tissue-specific RNA editing event. ApoB mRNA editing was the first example of editing observed in vertebrates. Editing of ApoB mRNA occurs in all
placental mammals. Editing occurs post transcriptionally as the nascent
polynucleotides do not contain edited nucleosides.
Type C to U editing of ApoB mRNA requires an editing complex or
holoenzyme (editosome) consisting of the C to U-editing enzyme
Apolipoprotein B mRNA editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide 1 (ApoBEC-1) as well as other auxiliary factors. ApoBEC-1 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the
APOBEC1 gene. It is a member of the
cytidine deaminase family. ApoBEC-1 alone is not sufficient for the editing of ApoB mRNA and requires at least one of these auxiliary factors,
APOBEC1 complementation factor (A1CF) for editing to occur. A1CF contains 3 non-identical repeats. It acts as the RNA-binding subunit and directs ApoBEC-1 to the ApoB mRNA downstream of the edited cytidine. Other auxiliary factors are known to be part of the holoenzyme. Some of these proteins have been identified, these are CUG binding protein 2 (
CUGBP2),
SYNCRIP (glycine-arginine-tyrosine-rich RNA binding protein, GRY-RBP), heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP)-C1 (
HNRNPC), ApoBEC-1 binding protein ABBP1 (
HNRNPAB), ABBP2, KH-type splicing regulatory binding protein (
KHSRP), Bcl-2-associated athanogene 4 (
BAG4), and auxiliary factor (AUX)240. All these proteins have been identified using detection assays and have all been demonstrated to interact with either ApoBEC-1, A1CF, or ApoB RNA. The function of these auxiliary proteins in the editing complex is unknown. As well as editing ApoB mRNA, the ApoBEC-1 editsome also edits the mRNA of
NF1. mRNA editing of ApoB mRNA is the best-defined example of this type of C to U RNA editing in humans.
Location Despite being a 14,000-residue-long transcript, a single cytidine is targeted for editing. Within the ApoB mRNA, a sequence consisting of 26 nucleotides necessary for editing is found. This is known as the editing motif. These nucleotides (6662–6687) were determined to be essential by site-specific mutagenesis experiments. An 11 nucleotide portion of this sequence 4–5 nucleotides downstream from the editing site is an important region known as the mooring sequence. A region called the spacer element is found 2–8 nucleotides between the edited nucleoside and this mooring sequence. There is also a regulatory sequence 3′ to the editing site. The active site of ApoBEC-1, the catalytic component of the editing holoenzyme, is thought to bind to an AU-rich region of the mooring sequence with the aid of ACF in binding the complex to the mRNA. The edited cytidine residue is located at nucleotide 6666 located in exon 26 of the gene. Editing at this site results in a codon change from a Glutamine codon (CAA) to an in-frame stop codon (UAA). The predicted secondary structure formed by ApoB mRNA is thought to allow for contact between the residue to be edited and the active site of APOBEC1, as well as for binding of ACF and other auxiliary factors associated with the editosome.
Regulation Editing of ApoB mRNA in humans is tissue-regulated, with ApoB48 being the main ApoB protein of the small intestine in humans. It occurs in lesser amounts in the colon, kidney, and stomach, along with the non-edited version. Editing is also developmentally regulated, with the non-edited version only being translated early in development, but the edited form increases during development in the tissues where editing can occur. Editing levels of ApoB mRNA have been shown to vary in response to changes in diet, exposure to alcohol and hormone levels.
Conservation ApoB mRNA editing also occurs in mice and rats. In contrast to humans editing occurs in liver in mice and rats up to a frequency of 65%. It has not been observed in birds or lesser species.
Consequences Structure Editing results in a codon change creating an in-frame stop codon, leading to translation of a truncated protein, ApoB48. This stop codon results in the translation of a protein that lacks the carboxyl terminus, which contains the protein's LDLR binding domain. The full protein ApoB100, which has nearly 4500 amino acids, is present in VLDL and LDL. Since many parts of ApoB100 are in an
amphipathic condition, the structure of some of its domains is dependent on underlying lipid conditions. However, it is known to have the same overall folding as LDL, having five main domains. Recently the first structure of LDL at human body temperature in native condition has been found using cryo-electron microscopy at a resolution of 16 Angstrom. The overall folding of ApoB-100 has been confirmed, and some heterogeneity in the local structure of its domains has been mapped.
Function Editing is restricted to those transcripts expressed in the
small intestine. This shorter version of the protein has a function specific to the small intestine. The main function of the full-length
liver expressed ApoB100 is as a ligand for activation of the LDL-R. However, editing results in a protein lacking this LDL-R binding region of the protein. This alters the function of the protein and the shorter ApoB48 protein, as specific functions relative to the small intestine. ApoB48 is identical to the amino-terminal 48% of ApoB100. The function of this isoform is in fat absorption of the small intestine and is involved in the synthesis, assembly and secretion of
chylomicrons. These chylomicrons transport dietary lipids to tissues, while the remaining chylomicrons, along with associated residual lipids, are in 2–3 hours taken up by the liver via the interaction of
apolipoprotein E (ApoE) with lipoprotein receptors. It is the dominant ApoB protein in the small intestine of most mammals. It is a key protein in the exogenous pathway of lipoprotein metabolism. Intestinal proteins containing ApoB48 are metabolized to chylomicron remnant particles, which are taken up by remnant receptors. == See also ==